MEDICAL DataBreach_lg

Published on November 10th, 2014 | by Roger Chu

5 Ways Health Data Breaches Are Far Worse Than Financial Ones

Remember that song Janis Joplin made famous “Piece of My Heart?” I do, and it reminds me of the fundamental difference between financial and healthcare data breaches.

The breach of personal financial information causes stress — recovering missing funds, paying late fees or interest, worrying about credit worthiness. Ultimately, however, a person’s financial identity can be fully restored.

Not so with medical identity. Healthcare data breaches have a much more personal, longer lasting, and potentially deadly impact.

Victims are at the mercy of those who, through fair means or foul, have control of their protected health information (PHI). And several factors contribute to the costlier, deadlier effects of healthcare data breaches over financial ones.

1. High volume of healthcare data breaches. 2013 statistics from the Identity Theft Resource Center were reported in a recent Fortune.com article: 44 percent of all breaches were healthcare related, while financial service breaches were just 3.7 percent (the first time that healthcare industry breaches exceeded all others). Healthcare is again on track to lead in 2014, also according to the Identity Theft Resource Center—a dubious distinction, to be sure.

When comparing the maturity of the healthcare industry to the financial industry in addressing data breaches, FTC privacy and identity protection attorney Steven Toporoff, said in the same Fortune article, “In the financial world, we’ve been dealing with these problems for years. Unfortunately, in the medical world, it has not caught up yet.”

Full article by By Tom Garrubba, Senior director, Santa Fe Group and Shared Assessments Program

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About the Author

is the Marketing Coordinator at GSAmart, the leading GSA sales and marketing partner for technology companies.



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