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Healthcare patient data breaches cost U.S. $6B annually

By Molly Merrill

The healthcare industry is spending an estimated $6 billion annually on data breaches involving patient information, according to the Ponemon Institute.

The Traverse City, Mich.-based privacy and information management research firm has joined with ID Experts, a provider of data breach solutions, to release Benchmark Study on Patient Privacy and Data Security.

The study, issued Tuesday, indicates that protecting patient data is a low priority for hospitals and that organizations have little confidence in their ability to secure patient records, putting individuals at great risk for medical identity theft, financial theft and embarrassment of exposure of private information.

The passage of the HITECH Act in 2009 widened the scope of privacy and security protections under HIPAA to provide stronger safeguards for patient data. This includes notification to patients when their information is breached.

"Our research shows that the healthcare industry is struggling to protect sensitive medical information, putting patients at risk of medical identity fraud and costing hospitals and other healthcare services companies millions in annual breach-related costs," said Larry Ponemon, chairman and founder of the Ponemon Institute.

"At this point one would hope to see that healthcare organizations have improved information security practices and come into compliance with HITECH, now that it's been more than one year since it was enacted," he said. "Instead we found enormous vulnerabilities. The protection of patient data should be at the forefront of their efforts."

According to the study:

  • The impact of a data breach over a two-year period is approximately $2 million per organization, and the lifetime value of a lost patient is $107,580. The average organization had 2.4 data breach incidents over the past two years.
  • Data breaches are most often caused by unintentional employee action, lost or stolen computing devices or third-party error.
  • Organizations have little or no confidence in their ability to appropriately secure patient records (58 percent). Healthcare organizations have inadequate resources (71 percent) and insufficient policies and procedures in place (69 percent) to prevent and quickly detect patient data loss.
  • 70 percent of hospitals stated that protecting patient data is not a top priority. Patient billing (35 percent) and medical records (26 percent) are the most susceptible to data loss or theft. A majority of organizations have less than two staff dedicated to data protection management (67 percent).
  • HITECH has exposed the healthcare industry's lax data protection practices rather than improved the safety of patient records. The majority (71 percent) of respondents do not believe the regulations have significantly changed the management practices of patient records. The findings indicate there is a significant number of data breaches that go undetected and therefore unreported.

"We talk with healthcare compliance people dealing with data breach risks every day and they just can't get their arms around the problem of data exposure," said Rick Kam, president and co-founder of ID Experts. "Unfortunately, in healthcare organizations, patient revenue trumps risk management."