Law 2.0 Blog
"Covers privacy, security, health information technology, health reform, and e-discovery-related topics."
Author: Robert J. Hudock is an associate at Epstein Becker & Green in Washington, D.C.
Blawg Related Categories: Health Law • Trials & Litigation • Evidence • Associate
Recent Posts from Law 2.0 Blog
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HHS Announces Proposed Rulemaking to modify the HIPAA privacy Rule to Comply with Section 105 of Title I of the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2008 (GINA)
On October 7, 2009 HHS announced proposed rulemaking to modify the HIPAA privacy rule to comply with Section 105 of Title I of the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2008 (GINA) regarding the privacy and…
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Four Members of Congress Complain to Secretary of HHS About the Harm Standard
Generally in the event of a “breach” of “unsecured” PHI, a covered entity must notify each individual whose unsecured PHI has been, or is reasonably believed to have been, breached. (45 C.F.R. § 164.404(a)(1).) Despite…
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Content of the Notice to the Secretary of HHS for a Reportable Security Breach
The Secretary has delayed enforcement of the Security Breach Rules to give covered entities and business associates a reasonable amount of time to come into compliance. However, in anticipation of covered entities’ new reporting obligations,…
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Fear Mongering or Legitimate Criticism — “HHS guts health-care breach notification law, groups warn”
I am a little unclear as to why privacy advocates and security vendors believe that the harm standard, found within the new HHS regulations for security breaches, in any way hampers the HITECH Act's security…
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9th Circuit Decision in LVRC Holdings Rejects 7th Circuit’s Holding in Citrin Based on a Motivation Theory of Liability Under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act
The Ninth Circuit rejected an employer’s argument that a former employee violated the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (“CFAA”), 18 U.S.C. § 1030, when he emailed company client lists and financial data to himself for…
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Updated — Summary of 50 State Security Breach Notification Laws
Attached is an updated summary of the major provisions of each state law that have enacted security breach statutes. In the event of a security breach, you should consult legal counsel to ascertain the appropriate…
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Excellent Article from American Health Lawyers Association’s Healthcare Liability & Litigation Health Briefs, on 9/9/09. by Kristen McDonald. (Republished with permission from the author.)
What happens if the offices of a covered entity are broken into and unsecured protected health information (PHI) of more than 500 individuals is stolen? With the enactment of the Health Information Technology for Economic…
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Is Truly De-identified Data an Impossibility?
Social networking sites, efficient search tools (bing, dogpile, google, yahoo), blogs, cookies, mailing lists, message boards, active x controls/ embedded java script on websites and other databases make it easy to identify that new business…
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Evaluating Secutiy Incidents — Security Incident DOs and DON’Ts
Security Incidents can be accidental incursions or deliberate attempts to break into systems and can be benign to malicious in purpose or consequence, each incident requires a careful response at a level commensurate with its…
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The Federal False Claims Act and the Anti-kickback laws are a dangerous one two punch: Pfizer settlement 2.3 billion in penalties.
Pfizer to pay $2.3 billion to resolve criminal and civil health care liability relating to fraudulent marketing and the payment of kickbacks: (1) Largest combined federal and state health care fraud settlement in the history…