Attorney General Todd Rokita protects 1.5 million patients from Inmediata’s data breach, leads 33 states

Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita continues his leadership in the fight to hold HIPAA-covered entities accountable for patient privacy in the most recent multistate settlement with Puerto Rico-based health care clearinghouse Inmediata for a coding issue that exposed the protected health information (“PHI”) of approximately 1.5 million consumers for almost three years.

Rokita

“Our office will never back down from protecting patient privacy,” AG Rokita said. “All patients deserve privacy and should feel protected by their health care providers.”

AG Rokita led a coalition of 33 attorneys general to investigate the incident and negotiate a settlement with the company.

Under the settlement, Inmediata has agreed to overhaul its data security and breach notification practices and make a $1.4 million payment to states. Indiana will receive over $131,000 from the settlement.

As a health care clearinghouse, Inmediata facilitates transactions between health care providers and insurers across the United States. On Jan. 15, 2019, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Civil Rights alerted Inmediata that PHI maintained by Inmediata was available online and had been indexed by search engines.

As a result, sensitive patient information could be viewed through online searches, and potentially downloaded by anyone with access to an internet search engine.

Inmediata was alerted to the breach on Jan. 15, 2019, but they delayed notification to impacted consumers for over three months and sent misaddressed notices.  Further, the notices were far from clear – many consumers complained that without sufficient details or context. They had no idea why Inmediata had their data, which may have caused recipients to dismiss the notices as illegitimate.

This settlement resolves allegations of the attorneys general that Inmediata violated state consumer protection laws, breach notification laws, and HIPAA by failing to implement reasonable data security. This includes failing to conduct a secure code review at any point prior to the breach, and then failing to provide affected consumers with timely and complete information regarding the breach, as required by law.

Under the settlement, Inmediata has agreed to strengthen its data security and breach notification practices going forward.