Medical diagnoses of 130,000 people lost

June 30th, 2010 by Agent Smith (0) Data Theft & Loss,In the News

New York-based Lincoln Medical and Mental Health Center is the center of attention in security news after exposing sensitive patient information. The lost data was the result of a failed FedEx delivery – CDs with unencrypted data was sent to the Center but never made it to its destination.

The lost data included medical and psychological diagnoses and procedures for over 130 000 patients, as stated in an official notification. An investigation trying to locate the missing CDs was launched back in April, but it failed to recover the data: names, addresses, social security numbers medical record numbers, dates of birth and more, enough for any half-decent identity thief to have a blast.

According to the Register, Licoln is at least note alone in this mess:

Lincoln’s notification to the US Department of Health website came the same day officials at the University of Maine said sensitive details for 4,585 individuals who sought services at the school’s counseling center have been stolen by hackers who compromised two servers. The exposed data included names, clinical information and social security numbers for people who used the service over an eight-year span ending last week.

Other medical facilities to fess up to losing patient data in the past 24 hours, according to the Department of Health website, include Silicon Valley Eyecare Optometry and Contact Lenses, with 40,000 people affected, Kentucky’s Our Lady of Peace Hospital, with 24,600 affected, and the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, which affected 60,000.

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