Breaching the Security of the Kaiser Permanente Internet Patient Portal: the Organizational Foundations of Information Security
- aGeorgetown University Medical Center, Washington, DC
- bStanford University Medical Center, Palo Alto, CA
- Correspondence and reprints: Jeff Collmann, Ph.D., 5319 29th St, NW, Washington, DC, 20015; (e-mail: <collmanj{at}georgetown.edu>)
- Received 6 July 2006
- Accepted 29 October 2006
Abstract
This case study describes and analyzes a breach of the confidentiality and integrity of personally identified health information (e.g. appointment details, answers to patients’ questions, medical advice) for over 800 Kaiser Permanente (KP) members through KP Online, a web-enabled health care portal. The authors obtained and analyzed multiple types of qualitative data about this incident including interviews with KP staff, incident reports, root cause analyses, and media reports. Reasons at multiple levels account for the breach, including the architecture of the information system, the motivations of individual staff members, and differences among the subcultures of individual groups within as well as technical and social relations across the Kaiser IT program. None of these reasons could be classified, strictly speaking, as “security violations.” This case study, thus, suggests that, to protect sensitive patient information, health care organizations should build safe organizational contexts for complex health information systems in addition to complying with good information security practice and regulations such as the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) of 1996.
Footnotes
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The authors thank staff at Kaiser Permanente for their review and comments on the paper and Sarah Riedle for her expert editing. The Georgetown University Institutional Review Board reviewed and approved the protocol for this study. An Interagency Personnel Agreement with the Telemedicine and Advanced Technology Research Center (TATRC), US Army Medical Research and Materiel Command, Ft. Detrick, MD, sponsored part of Dr. Collmann’s work. Opinions, interpretations, conclusions and recommendations are those of the authors and are not necessarily endorsed by Kaiser Permanente or TATRC.









