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Scathing Report Finds Medicare, Medicaid Database Could Have Been Hacked

 

Image of stethoscope via Shutterstock The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) released a report from its Office of the Inspector General (OIG) regarding the wireless networks of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ (CMS) facilities. The report shows that CMS, which collects and stores the financial and healthcare information of millions of Americans, had security flaws in its computer systems that left it vulnerable to cyber-attacks.

As part of their report, the OIG simulated wireless cyber-attacks on CMS using common techniques. They found that while CMS security blocked certain attacks, they found four specific vulnerabilities in the online security controls. “The vulnerabilities that we identified were collectively and, in some cases, individually significant,” the report said. While they did not find evidence of any attacks, the OIG did find that “exploitation could have resulted in unauthorized access to and disclosure of personally identifiable information.”

In their public comment on the report, CMS said that they concur with the OIG’s findings, they have addressed some of the problems that were found, and that they are currently addressing the rest. However, the report says that in a separate comment on a more detailed account that OIG sent directly to them, CMS said it accepts the risk presented by a number of the security weaknesses.

[Image via Shutterstock]

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