New Settlement Shows a Return To Enforcement, Security Basics

Remember a time before the HHS Office for Civil Rights (OCR) decided to make patients’ access to medical records a priority?

With its 19th settlement under its belt just last month, those who may be caught up in OCR’s medical records focus could be forgiven: the agency has settled with a record number of covered entities (CEs) for a single issue.

In 2018, then OCR Director Roger Severino launched the agency’s Right of Access Initiative, with a steady drumbeat of settlements to follow. Six of this year’s eight settlements are part of that effort—and on June 2, OCR announced yet another agreement with a CE over this issue, for $5,000 with an endocrinology practice in West Virginia.[1]

But there also was a nonaccess settlement in May for $25,000 with Peachstate Health Management LLC,[2] and it differs from the first 2021 OCR security rule agreement in more than just financial terms.

The year started off with a whopper of a settlement—New York-based Excellus Health Plan Inc. agreed to pay $5.1 million and implement a two-year corrective action plan (CAP) related to the discovery in 2015 of a hacking in 2013 that exposed the protected health information (PHI) of 9.3 million individuals.[3]

Announced May 25, Peachstate’s settlement, unlike many OCR agreements, calls for the firm to hire an external monitor to ensure its compliance with a three-year CAP, a year longer than the term the agency has imposed in the majority of cases in the recent past.

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