Data loss a global endemic as Canadian Health Agency admits to Major Hack
File this one under the " There Goes Your Personal Info" category... News just in from Canada confirms that database disasters are not just confined to UK government agencies, after sensitive patient information has been accessed by persons unknown on a Canadian health agency computer.
"Police in Newfoundland are reported to be investigating to what degree hackers have accessed medical information - including test results on HIV and hepatitis - on a desktop computer that was taken home by a consultant," said Calum Macleod, European director with Cyber-Ark, the digital vaulting and database encryption specialist.
"The case came to light late last week after a health agency issued a media release on the hack of the data, which was collated by the Provincial Public Health Laboratory in Newfoundland," he added.
According to Macleod, the consultant only became aware of the hack when he was called by someone who identified himself as a representative of a computer security company.
"Newfoundland and Labrador Health Minister Ross Wiseman says that health department guidelines have been broken by the consultant concerned, but that doesn't detract from the fact that the release of sensitive medical information could be a personal disaster for the patients concerned," he said.
"It's bad enough for a patient to be HIV positive, but then being told there is a risk that their medical status could be broadcast on the Internet is additional, and unnecessary suffering," he added.
Macleod went to to say that, if the medical information on the consultant's computer had been encrypted, the hacking incident would never have occurred.
"It's clear after last week's disastrous HMRC loss of 25 million records in the UK and now that the Canadian's have admitted to this dreadful breach of such private information, that lack of security in the public sector is clearly endemic right across the globe. I dread to think about all the other cases that we never get to hear about." he noted.
Reproduced from an article published by GISuser.com
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