Encrypted Email Helps Harvard Pilgrim Ensure HIPAA Compliance


Author: Adam Stone
If you are going to lock the door, you may as well close the window, too.

That’s what IT managers at Harvard Pilgrim Health Care learned as they moved to secure personal data traversing their email system. While a solid encryption tool got them part way home, it took adding a content monitoring and filtering application to bring the solution full circle.

“Not everybody has the same cookie-cutter architecture in place for their email systems, so you really need to take time to develop how this is going to fit together and how it is going to work,” says Ken Patterson, chief information security officer at Harvard Pilgrim Health Care.

A nonprofit company based in Wellesley, Mass., Harvard Pilgrim delivers health benefits throughout Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Maine. In addition to its million members, the company keeps up regular communications with some 30,000 providers, over 130 hospitals, more than 6,000 brokers and other outside partners. Harvard Pilgrim averages about 5,000 outbound email messages per day.

 Like others, Harvard Pilgrim must comply with HIPAA and other regulations or face stiff penalties. So far, says  Patterson, his system has never had a breach, but “We don’t like to wait until something happens before we react.”

The health plan’s existing system was potentially vulnerable. Users protected Word and Excel documents in emails by using the password protection offered by Microsoft Office. It was too hands-on, too time-consuming, Patterson says.

A preliminary risk assessment identified email as a source of potential vulnerability, with encryption as the most likely way to mitigate risk. To assess potential solutions, Patterson turned to a longtime partner Perot Systems of Plano, Texas. In addition to ease of use and reliability, Patterson wanted a solution supported by an open standards architecture. “I didn’t really want any proprietary solutions,” he said.

Together with Perot he identified the PGP Universal Gateway Email, an encryption system that works with the Harvard Pilgrim’s  Lotus Notes 6.5 e-mail system. Any time a user fires off an email containing confidential information, that user simply clicks a button in Notes: “PGP Send.” This encrypts the message, while on the other end the recipient takes in not just the message but also instructions for downloading a certificate from a Harvard Pilgrim Web server, which allows the e-mail program to decrypt the contents of the message.

The system tested well with internal users, while giving Patterson the openness he was seeking. Trouble was, encryption alone was not delivering the expected results.

To ensure things were running smoothly, Patterson test drove Vontu data protection software. “It was immediately apparent we had a need to help enforce our policy,” he said, without specifying the degree of failure within the system. San Francisco-based Vontu provides data security and compliance tools to a range of verticals including the health care industry.

Simply put, people were not always pushing the encryption button. Patterson needed Vontu’s ability to catch and correct oversights before sensitive information could get out on the street. Vontu monitors communications flow, flags potential breaches, and puts the brakes on suspect traffic.

Pattern’s passion for openness paid off; Vontu could integrate into PGP, thus delivering a more well-rounded solution, including discovery and prevention steps that augmented encryption. “I like the fact that I was not driven toward using a single content monitoring and filtering solution,” he said.

All these capabilities depend largely on the initial ability to identify and define potentially sensitive information. Here Patterson gives Vontu high marks. “We think we know where it all is, but we wanted to be able to really inventory where exactly that protected health data is and whether it is adequately secured.”

Now, he said, it is.

Want to read more expert articles like this? Click here to subscribe to Digital HealthCare & Productivity.

Click here to log in.

0 Comments

Add Comment

Text Only 2000 character limit

Page 1 of 1

White Papers & Special Reports

thomson reuters image
Biomarkers: An Indispensible Addition to the Drug Development Toolkit
Examining the Potential of Biomarkers
Sponsored by Thomson Reuters

Biomarkers are becoming an essential part of clinical development. In this white paper, Thomson Reuters provides insight from experts in industry and academia, and explores the role of biomarkers as evaluative tools in improving clinical research and the challenges this presents.

Discover the potential of biomarkers to:

  • Improve decision making
  • Accelerate drug development
  • Reduce development costs


BlueArc_Scientific Data
Scientific Data Lifecycle Management: Preparing for Storage in an Uncertain Future
Sponsored by BlueArc

Managing vast and overwhelming streams of gene sequencing data today requires ultra-high performance systems and processes. With continued rapid advancement and improvements in gene sequencing, expect tomorrow’s instruments to output quantities of genomic information that will dwarf current levels. Help your organization maintain data control and prepare for the future of sequencing through this informative paper that discusses:

  • The information technology challenges of gene sequencing
  • “Intelligent” methods for data management and customization
  • System survival tips... Deciding what data to keep or delete
  • New tools to keep scientists ahead of impending data torrents


SAS Managed image
Managed Innovation, Assured Compliance
Developing, executing and managing the transformation, analysis and submission of clinical research data with SAS® Drug Development
Sponsored by SAS
Get better products to market faster. Download this white paper to discover the top ten challenges facing life science executives and how to overcome them. See how SAS Drug Development transforms clinical data into true innovation.


Life Science Webcasts & Podcasts

Presented by Trade Commission of Spain

Spain Biotech: An Engine for Economic Change 

TCS podcastDiscover how Spain is focusing on biotechnology to be an engine for economic change through gradual internationalization, development and technology transfer.

Regional governments are actively investing in public and private biology research and promoting the creation of knowledge-based companies. Spain’s human capital combined with aggressive investment in biotech research and infrastructure has led to the creation of bio-clusters.

Today, there are nearly 700 Spanish companies engaged in biotechnology, with almost 50 percent growth in funding devoted to research. In fact, spending on internal R & D in biotechnology has grown 46 percent and is close to 300 million Euros.

Access the podcast 

 



More Podcasts

Job Openings

saic_logo

MANAGER, SCIENTIFIC COMPUTING & PROGRAMMING
(Bioinformatics Manager)
SAIC-Frederick, Inc has an exciting opportunity for a Manager, Scientific Computing & Programming - Core Genoytyping Facility in Gaithersburg, Maryland.  In this role, you will lead the Bioinformatics & Analysis Group.
Master’s or equivalent required.  PhD preferred. Six years experience in development of scientific programs in high-performance computing environment including five years supporting scientific research in computational chemistry, biology, or genetics, & two years supervisory experience.  View complete job posting & apply: www.saic-frederick.com. Position #146945.

For reprints and/or copyright permission, please contact The YGS Group, 1808 Colonial Village Lane, Lancaster, PA;

(717) 399-1900 ext. 125, or via email to Ashley.Zander@theYGSgroup.com.