Idaho State University will pay $400,000 to the U.S. Department of Health Human Services to settle alleged violations of the HIPAA Security Rule. The settlement comes after ISU’s Pocatello Family Medicine Clinic disabled server firewall protections for a period of at least 10 months, resulting in the breach of electronic protected health information for 17,500 patients.
ISU operates 29 outpatient clinics and is required to provide health information technology systems security at those clinics. Between four and eight of the ISU clinics are subject to the HIPAA Privacy and Security Rules, including the clinic where the breach occurred, HHS officials say.
Just this January, in what's been billed as the first HIPAA breach settlement involving fewer than 500 patients, Hospice of North Idaho paid $50,000 to the Department of Health and Human Services, settling potential HIPAA violations stemming from a 2010 incident. After an unencrypted company laptop containing the electronic protected health information of 441 patients had been stolen in June 2010, officials at the HHS Office for Civil Rights began its investigation and found that HONI had not conducted adequate risk analysis to safeguard patient ePHI.