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CONTACT: Abby Park, +1 614 545 4225 |
RX for Patient Privacy and Security: HIPAA
The Race for Compliance
Columbus, Ohio (Dec. 3, 2002) As the clock
ticks away, the health care industry needs to turn to
external privacy and security professionals to achieve
compliance with the Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act (HIPAA), especially those
regulations concerning patient privacy. Compliance
with HIPAA guidelines on patient privacy is required
by April 14, 2003.
Since Congress enacted the law in 1996, HIPAA has
pushed hospitals and other health care organizations
to shift from older, mainframe technology and
paper-based processes to more efficient and secure
systems that improve patient privacy and
confidentiality. Yet, a recent survey, conducted by
Phoenix Health Systems and the Healthcare Information
and Management Systems Society (HIMSS), an
organization representing more than 13,000 health care
institutions, revealed that less than 50% of affected
health care systems have completed an assessment of
the effect that HIPAA will have on their
organizations.
"Internet privacy has always been a hotly debated
topic," explains Matt Curtin, Internet security expert
and chief executive officer of Interhack Corporation,
a world-class leader in data security. "There was a
time when our medical records lived in a dusty old
file cabinet in the doctor's office, but now our
private health care information is being collected,
shared, analyzed and stored with few legal
safeguards. The privacy and security rules ensure that
our sensitive health information is not released to
someone it should not be, as it is transmitted over
non-trusted paths such as the commercial
Internet."
The Company is no latecomer to the privacy and
security arena. Interhack's Privacy Project has
demonstrated time and time again how Web sites can
unexpectedly leak information about users to sites
that have not been authorized to receive this kind of
information. Their research has shown how some systems
have been implemented such that privacy erodes over
time.
"Often, we see that advances made in research have a
natural application for solving critical business
challenges," states Curtin. "Back in 1998, we were in
the midst of developing sound security policies and
operating procedures, and now these methodologies are
specifically applicable to HIPAA."
Privacy issues are among the least understood areas of
HIPAA. Many organizations find themselves hampered by
the interpretation of the regulations, and just don't
have the time or expertise to put a plan into
action.
Basically, there are three levels of information
assurance services: assessment, evaluation, and
penetration tests. To determine the current degree of
HIPAA readiness, a company begins by conducting an
assessment of all its systems, policies, procedures
and practices, and accompanies this with a security
risk analysis. At Interhack, the Company assesses the
organization's information security posture, in
support of HIPAA's privacy and security rules, as
defined by the U.S. National Security Agency's (NSA)
INFOSEC Assessment Methodology (IAM).
In addition to NSA's guidelines, the U.S. Government's
National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST)
is also developing standards for performing security
assessments, evaluations and system
certification. Interhack is actively working with NIST
by reviewing all of their proposals and providing
feedback.
"Patients must trust their health care providers and
any breach of confidence erodes that trust," says
Curtin. "Because of our understanding of privacy and
security, our services
help our clients not only comply with HIPAA, but also
keep them worthy of their patients' trust."
Interhack Corporation is an Information Technology
firm dedicated to computer trustworthiness that
specializes in research, development and
consulting. Practice areas include Security Policy
Development, Privacy Assurance, System Security
Audits, Development Services, and Forensic Data
Analysis. Founded in 1997 by computer and information
science researchers in Columbus, Ohio, Interhack now
helps clients all over North America build and
maintain systems worthy of trust, in a time of
unprecedented connectivity.
Interhack's research led to discoveries such as
Netscape's "What's Related" privacy problems, Double
Click's Opt-Out system failures, Toys `R' Us's site
visitor profiling, TRUSTe's privacy policy failure,
Bank One's On-line insecure account number handling as
well as the defeat of the U.S. Government's
then-standard for data encryption, DES. Interhack's
work has been favorably cited in NIST for its
recommendations made for firewalls and securing Web
servers.
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