Twelve US states are suing an electronic healthcare record provider who lost 3.9 million personal records in 2015.. The Attorneys general of Arizona, Arkansas, Florida, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Carolina, and Wisconsin clubbed together to file suit against Indiana-based Medical Informatics Engineering (MIE) and its subsidiary NoMoreClipboard (NMC) this week. The states, who each have residents affected by the breach, are negotiating a payout with the company. The link for this article located at Naked Security/Sophos is no longer available. . Twelve states have launched legal proceedings against an electronic health records provider after a major data breach affected 3.9 million people's personal information. Data Breach, Healthcare Records, Electronic Medical Data. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
WASHINGTON D.C. -- The push for a national network of electronic medical records poses significant privacy risks at the same time that it promises to save lives, said members of a panel here at the Computer, Freedom and Privacy Conference on Wednesday. . In 2004, the Bush Administration mandated that Americans have electronic health records in 10 years and called for the development of a National Health Information Network. Yet, such a network could pose significant privacy, health and identity fraud risks, said Pam Dixon, a panelist and executive director of the World Privacy Forum. "There are significant issues with who has access to this data," Dixon said. In a report released Wednesday, the World Privacy Forum documented cases of medical identity fraud and found that errors in patient records can result in risk of misdiagnoses and improper billing. Moreover, such errors can be almost impossible to correct, Dixon said. The link for this article located at is no longer available. . In 2004, the Bush Administration mandated that Americans have electronic health records in 10 years . washington, national, network, electronic, medical, records, poses, significant. . Brittany Day
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