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Exam CIPP-US topic 1 question 58 discussion

Actual exam question from IAPP's CIPP-US
Question #: 58
Topic #: 1
[All CIPP-US Questions]

SCENARIO -
Please use the following to answer the next question:
You are the chief privacy officer at HealthCo, a major hospital in a large U.S. city in state A. HealthCo is a HIPAA-covered entity that provides healthcare services to more than 100,000 patients. A third-party cloud computing service provider, CloudHealth, stores and manages the electronic protected health information (ePHI) of these individuals on behalf of HealthCo. CloudHealth stores the data in state B. As part of HealthCo’s business associate agreement (BAA) with CloudHealth, HealthCo requires CloudHealth to implement security measures, including industry standard encryption practices, to adequately protect the data. However, HealthCo did not perform due diligence on CloudHealth before entering the contract, and has not conducted audits of CloudHealth’s security measures.
A CloudHealth employee has recently become the victim of a phishing attack. When the employee unintentionally clicked on a link from a suspicious email, the PHI of more than 10,000 HealthCo patients was compromised. It has since been published online. The HealthCo cybersecurity team quickly identifies the perpetrator as a known hacker who has launched similar attacks on other hospitals – ones that exposed the PHI of public figures including celebrities and politicians.
During the course of its investigation, HealthCo discovers that CloudHealth has not encrypted the PHI in accordance with the terms of its contract. In addition, CloudHealth has not provided privacy or security training to its employees. Law enforcement has requested that HealthCo provide its investigative report of the breach and a copy of the PHI of the individuals affected.
A patient affected by the breach then sues HealthCo, claiming that the company did not adequately protect the individual’s ePHI, and that he has suffered substantial harm as a result of the exposed data. The patient’s attorney has submitted a discovery request for the ePHI exposed in the breach.
What is the most significant reason that the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) might impose a penalty on HealthCo?

  • A. Because HealthCo did not require CloudHealth to implement appropriate physical and administrative measures to safeguard the ePHI
  • B. Because HealthCo did not conduct due diligence to verify or monitor CloudHealth’s security measures
  • C. Because HIPAA requires the imposition of a fine if a data breach of this magnitude has occurred
  • D. Because CloudHealth violated its contract with HealthCo by not encrypting the ePHI
Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: B 🗳️

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fightingpotato
1 month, 1 week ago
Selected Answer: B
The most significant reason that the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) might impose a penalty on HealthCo is B. Because HealthCo did not conduct due diligence to verify or monitor CloudHealth’s security measures. Under HIPAA, covered entities are responsible for ensuring that their business associates implement adequate security measures to protect ePHI. The failure to perform due diligence or audits to confirm that CloudHealth was compliant with security requirements could lead to significant penalties for HealthCo, as it indicates a lack of oversight and responsibility in protecting patient data.
upvoted 1 times
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Bhimesh
7 months, 2 weeks ago
Selected Answer: D
Should be D. Because CloudHealth violated its contract with HealthCo by not encrypting the ePHI What Constitutes a HIPAA Violation? A HIPAA violation is when a HIPAA-covered entity – or a business associate – fails to comply with one or more of the provisions of the HIPAA Privacy, Security, or Breach Notification Rules. A breach applies only to “unsecured” information, and a covered entity can avoid liability if it utilizes encryption Software to secure information
upvoted 2 times
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BM9904
9 months ago
Selected Answer: B
“if the breach affects 500 or more in the same jurisdiction, it must notify the media. All breaches requiring notice must be reported to HHS at least annually. A breach applies only to “unsecured” information, and a covered entity can avoid liability if it utilizes encryption software to secure information.” Section 8.2.1
upvoted 2 times
BM9904
7 months, 3 weeks ago
Sorry D here
upvoted 1 times
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Romeokton
9 months, 3 weeks ago
Might be also C here...
upvoted 1 times
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