Most Popular Stories
Events
- CIO Healthcare Summit
March 11-14 — Scottsdale, AZ - Ready to meet the next-generation of business?
March 4-6 2012 — San Francisco, CA - COMPTEL PLUS Spring 2012
April 15-18 — San Francisco, CA - CIO Summit
March 18- 21 — Miami, FL
Sponsored Links
Free Newsletter
HOT TOPICS >> Tech world's top flops and fiascos of 2011 | Windows 8 slideshow | Cybersecurity | Caron's Q&As
INDUSTRY >> Healthcare IT | Government IT | Financial Services IT | Biotech IT | Compliance IT
Free Newsletter
FierceCIO provides CIOs with IT best practices, business intelligence, and forward-looking IT strategies. Join 32,000+ industry insiders who get FierceCIO twice a week via email and save time.
About | View Sample | Privacy
Latest News
Popular Topics
Whitepapers
- Whitepaper: Integrated Analytics and WCM Can Improve Performance & ROI
- How Healthy Is Your Data Center?
- 5 Must Haves in your Information Management Strategy
- 5 Ways to Reduce Enterprise Mobililty Costs with Wireless Telecom Expense Management
- Because Hope Is Not A Strategy: Business Continuity/Disaster Recovery Planning
- Efficiency On Demand
Employee accesses 10,000 hospital records
There's never a dull moment in the IT world--or even a completely safe moment. The latest security incident comes from Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, where it is warning more than 10,000 patients that they may have been victims of identity theft. The hospital linked a woman working in the patient registration area to fraud.
The Secret Service and U.S. Postal Service have identified 46 victims of the scam, including 31 people connected to the hospital, according to PC World. Most of the 10,000 patients and former patients were notified that there was an "extremely low risk" of fraud, according to hospital spokesman Gary Stephenson. "We just contacted them to do due diligence," he told PC World.
Nevertheless, there is plenty to worry about. The thief had access to Social Security numbers, names, addresses, birth dates and insurance information of some patients. The hospital has since fired the employee and she will likely be indicted. This incident demonstrates that you can never be too cautious about your database or too certain about your employees.
For more on this ID theft:
- check out this PCWorld.com article
Related Articles:
What to do after a data breach
Employee data breached at Kaiser Permanente
Are you worried about growing Cybercrime?
Survey: Most businesses not attending to cloud security
Related Stories
- Not asking risky questions is risky business
- Sophisticated tools needed to manage today's risks
- The double-edged sword of being on the cutting edge of IT
- Financial liability is one risk of cloud-based services
- How to secure your security budget
- Are chief risk officers encroaching on your job?
- Three data breaches that underscore human error
- How to really know your security risks
- Eight steps to risk-oriented security
- Alleged Apple fraudster done in by email
Home
| Subscribe | Advertise | RSS |
Privacy
| Site Map
| EditorsTHE FIERCEMARKETS NETWORKFierceEnergy | FierceSmartGrid | FierceFinance | FierceFinanceIT | FierceComplianceIT | FierceHealthcare | FierceHealthFinance | FierceHealthIT | Hospital Impact | FierceMobileHealthcare | FierceHealthPayer | FiercePracticeManagement | FierceEMR | FierceCIO | FierceCIO:TechWatch | FierceContentManagement | FierceMobileIT | FierceGovernmentIT | FierceGovernment | FierceHomelandSecurity | FierceBiotech | FierceBiotech Research | FiercePharma | FierceVaccines | FierceBiotechIT | FiercePharma Manufacturing | FierceMedicalDevices | FierceDrugDelivery | FierceIPTV | FierceOnlineVideo | FierceTelecom | FierceEnterpriseCommunications | FierceBroadbandWireless | FierceDeveloper | FierceMobileContent | FierceWireless | FierceWireless:Europe | FierceCable© 2011 FierceMarkets. All rights reserved. |
![]() |




