Tag Archives: OCR

The 21st National HIPAA Summit

February 19-21, 2013, Washington DC

The National HIPAA Summit focuses on new HIPAA laws and regulations, and timing could not be better with the passing of the final Omnibus Rule.  During the Summit, leading regulators from the Centers of Medicare & Medicade Services, the Office for Civil Rights, and the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT will share their expertise with attendees over three days of educational sessions.

Mac McMillian, CEO of CynergisTek and Chair of the HIMSS Privacy & Security Policy Task Force, has the honor of participating as one of the HIPAA Privacy Experts.  He will co-present with Linda Sanches, Sr. Advisor at OCR, in an informative session, “Lessons Learned From the 2012 Audits”.  Together they will present examples from the OCR random audits, trend analysis and lessons learned, providing insight to any attendee trying to improve their own security programs and readiness.  Several of the focus areas highlighted in the OCR audit protocol are the direct result of findings from previous breaches and complaints that the OCR has handled as a part of their HIPAA enforcement responsibilities.

Download Mac McMillan’s introduction to “Lessons Learned From the 2012 Audits”, as well Linda Sanches’s detailed information on the OCRs initial analysis during the 2012 Random Audit Program.

Government Health IT Discusses Mac McMillan’s Thoughts on Omnibus Rule

CynergisTek’s CEO, Mac McMillan was recently interviewed and cited by Government Health IT.

Omnibus HIPAA’s Rule’s Impact on Data Breach Notification  January 18, 2013 by Tom Sullivan, Editor and Mary Mosquera

WASHINGTON – “The Omnibus Rule will come out this year,” Michael “Mac” McMillan, CEO of security and regulatory specialist CynergisTek explained earlier this week, “and when it does OCR will have what it needs to investigate their issues.”

And so the HIPAA Privacy and Security final rule arrived late Thursday, to a large extent tracking what was in the proposed rule, but also bringing some significant changes that will impact the industry, according to Bob Belfort, partner in the healthcare practice at Manatt, Phelps & Phillips, which works with states and providers on health IT and related public policy issues, and frequently helps clients craft breach notifications.

“The one that will probably get the most attention is the definition of a breach,” Belfort added. “There’s been a lot of controversy over the ‘risk of harm’ standard.”

[Q&A: Belfort on the delicate dance of data breach notification]

Indeed, the proposed rule held that there would be no breach unless there was significant risk of harm to the individual, but HHS indicated it might rethink that, Belfort explained, and in the omnibus rule replaced it with an assessment of whether the improper disclosure compromises PHI (protected health information).

“The burden is on the covered entity to show that there’s a low probability that the information has been compromised. There are two changes there,” Belfort said. “Number one, the focus of the assessment is no longer on the harm to the patient but whether the information has been compromised and, secondly, the burden of proof is clearly on the covered entity so if it can’t be determined pretty clearly that there is a low probability the information has been compromised, the covered entity has to treat it as a breach.”

Belfort views the final rule as HHS navigating the middle ground between privacy advocates arguing that any improper disclosure should be treated as a breach and those who wanted to retain the risk of harm standard.

Deven McGraw, director of the health privacy project at Center for Democracy and Technology and a member of the federal advisory Health IT Policy Committee said this is a very positive development.

[See also: Final HIPAA rule brings changes to fundraising, marketing of PHI]

“It continues to give organizations the right to do an investigation about what happened in the breach, and to make the judgment call in circumstances where the likelihood that anyone else saw the data is very low that they can make a decision not to notify for breach purposes,” McGraw continued. “This addresses the notion of over-notification that many stakeholders commented on and does it in a way that doesn’t give the breaching entity the subjective judgment call about whether that information would harm you or not. It refines some of the gray area and is a response to some of the criticism after the interim final rule. That’s appropriate.”

The rule also, as McMillan pointed out, arms OCR to continue audits and fines. “Third parties account for 40 percent of the breaches reported and 75 percent of the records exposed,” McMillan said.

Belfort expects the uptick in audits and fines currently under way to continue.

“We’re already seeing the beginning of more aggressive enforcement and stiffer penalties, more frequent penalties,” Belfort said. “And I think that trend will definitely accelerate.”

http://www.govhealthit.com/news/omnibus-hipaa-rules-impact-data-breach-notification

Mac McMillan Speaking at Hawaii-Alaska Chapter of HIMSS

Hawaii-Alaska Chapter of HIMSS Brownbag

October 9, 2012 @ 11:30

HMSA Building Multi-Purpose Room (MPR)

OCR Random Audits: A Look Inside

Presenter: Mac McMillian, HIMSS Privacy and Security Policy Task Force

This presentation will allow attendees the opportunity to discuss the OCR Random audit process, learn ways to assess their program and prepare for an audit.

Ø  During this session participants will:

Ø  Discuss what the audit process looks like and what to expect

Ø  Understand how to prepare your facility/department for the audit process

Ø  Understand how to review your program to understand weaknesses

Ø  Participants will review lessons learned from early audits

Ø  Heightened Enforcement and the Omnibus Rule

Ø  Where enforcement is at today and the signal HHS is sending

Mac McMillian serves as the National Chair for HIMSS Privacy and Security Policy Task Force.  The newly-formed HIMSS Privacy and Security Policy Task Force was established to bring together a group of industry thought leaders to support HIMSS’s formal response to new legislation, regulation, as well as to develop HIMSS policy position papers and tools that relate to healthcare privacy and security. One of the goals of the Task Force is to collaborate with fellow professional organizations like HFMA, MGMA, AHIMA, HCCA, etc. to formulate a broader industry response, when appropriate, as well.

___________________________________________________________

 

This is the fourth Brown-bag luncheon with this year’s theme of

“Bringing Healthcare Information Technology to the Consumer”:

–          July – Hawaii Health Connector (insurance exchange), presented by Coral Andrews, the Connector’s executive director

–         August – Update on HIMSS Advocacy, presented by Lee Castonguay, with Colin Underwood from Alaska

–         September  – Can Smart Cards help the consumer get more engaged in healthcare?, Presented by David King-Hurley of LifeNexus

o           UPCOMING – October 9  – OCR Random Audits: A Look Inside, presented by Mac McMillian, HIMSS Privacy and Security Policy Task Force

•                  Using Technology to Keep Seniors at Home

•                  Personal Health Records in the Cloud

•                  HIE for Everyone

•                  Privacy and Identity is a requirement

•                  MU 2 and 3, impacts on the consumer

•                  HIT Day for Public Policy

•                  Analytics and You

•                  Use of Games in Health Care

Mac McMillan, CEO CynergisTek, is joined by David Mayer, from OCR at AHIMA

Mac McMillan is joined by David Mayer, from OCR, to discuss the OCR Audit Program at the AHIMA Annual Conference, Privacy & Security Institute.

David discussed the current and future state of the program, while Mac addressed lessons learned from CynergisTek’s audit experiences with multiple clients, such as how yo prepare for each step of the audit process, how to interpret and use the audit protocol and important nuances of the process that everyone needs to know.  Both answered questions from a very lively audience to include questions around HITECH and pending rules.

Van Zimmerman Presenting, North Central Regional Conference

North Central Regional Conference
October 5th, 2012
Indianapolis, IN
 
 
 OCR Random Audits: A Look Inside 
Presenter: Van Zimmerman,  Principal, Privacy & Security, CynergisTek
This presentation will allow attendees the opportunity to discuss the OCR Random audit process, learn ways to assess their program and prepare for an audit.. 
During this session participants will: 
• Discuss what the audit process looks like and what to expect 
• Understand how to prepare your facility/department for the audit process 
• Understand how to review your program to understand weaknesses 
• Participants will review lessons learned from early audits

CynergisTek CEO to Speak at Five Educational Events in September


Industry Thought Leader, Mac McMillan, to Discuss Best Practices for Privacy and Security in the Era of Stage 2 Meaningful Use and OCR Audits

Austin, Texas, September 14, 2012CynergisTek™, an authority in enterprise security and privacy solutions and services for healthcare organizations, today announced that its CEO and Chair of the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) Privacy and Security Policy Task Force, Mac McMillan, will speak at five education sessions this month:

  • NCHICA “OCR Audit Readiness: Advice from Those in the Know.” Monday, September 10, 2012 at 11:30 a.m. EST
  • AHIA Tech Talk Roundtable call. Monday, September 10, 2012 at 3:30 p.m. EST
  • Iowa HIMSS, “OCR Audit Process: A Detailed Look Inside, Mac McMillian, HIMSS Privacy and Security Policy Task Force.” Wednesday, September 12, 2012 at 2:30 p.m. CST
  • CHCA Corporate Compliance Forum, Friday, September 14, 2012 at 8:00 a.m. CST
  • AHiMA Privacy and Security Institute, “OCR Audits: Lessons Learned,” (presentation with David

Mayer, OCR Senior Advisor) Saturday, September 29, 2012 at 11:00 a.m. CST

McMillan will provide attendees with a foundational understanding of the most significant IT security challenges currently facing healthcare today, including the implications of Meaningful Use and other regulatory initiatives. In addition to his general update on current industry trends, McMillan will also share lessons learned from CynergisTek’s experiences providing consultative services to multiple entities chosen to undergo the pilot phase of OCR’s HIPAA Audit program.

“The latest regulatory shifts towards a more stringent set of healthcare IT security standards have increased the pressure on organizations to get their security house in order. Simultaneously, recent hacker activities, like the extortion incident in Illinois, have demonstrated that the stakes are much higher than simple regulatory compliance,” said McMillan. “Both these trends have driven very strong demand for our expertise and unique perspective, and I am looking forward to sharing some of those firsthand lessons and best practices around preparing for new threats and regulations at these upcoming events.”

CynergisTek’s solutions and services are specifically designed to help healthcare organizations improve their security posture, facilitate compliance, advance operational efficiency and foster trust. CynergisTek’s managed and on-demand solutions address the fundamental elements of information security management, including:

  • Strategy and Governance
  • Compliance and Risk
  • Infrastructure
  • Technical Vulnerability Management
  • Audit Readiness
  • Managed Security Solutions

About CynergisTek

CynergisTek is an authority in healthcare information security and privacy management, regulatory compliance, IT audit and advisory services, business continuity management, security technology selection and implementation, and secure IT infrastructure architecture and design solutions. The firm offers practical, manageable and affordable consulting services for organizations of all sizes and complexity. Using an organized, planned and collaborative approach, CynergisTek applies multidisciplinary expertise to serve as partner and mentor, to enhance the consulting experience and, ultimately, clients’ compliance and business performance. CynergisTek participates in and contributes to HIMSS, AHIMA, HFMA, HCCA, AHIA and other industry bellwether organizations.