Vancouver Sun

Man arrested in relation to PharmaNet privacy breach

- CHERYL CHAN chchan@postmedia.com twitter.com/cherylchan

One man has been arrested in connection to a series of PharmaNet breaches that may have compromise­d the personal medical informatio­n of about 20,500 British Columbians.

Vancouver police executed a search warrant at a home in Richmond on March 23 and arrested a suspect. Investigat­ors believe the man gained unauthoriz­ed access to the provincial online prescripti­on-medication informatio­n system and used patients’ personal data for fraudulent purposes.

The man, who hasn’t been identified, faces a number of identityth­eft-related charges, said police. Charges haven’t been laid.

The Health Ministry characteri­zed the breach as a product of “cybercrime” that targeted doctors and medical clinic offices and PharmaNet service vendors.

“Through forensic analysis, we have learned that several breaches, which have occurred since July 2016, are connected,” said spokeswoma­n Lori Cascaden.

“This inappropri­ate access to PharmaNet is not because of a direct hack into the system. It is suspected that access was obtained through impersonat­ion of physicians and other methods.”

In February, the Health Ministry sent out letters to about 7,500 people affected by the breach, which officials became aware about after users and vendors reported incidents of “suspicious access.”

Since then, another 13,000 people may have had their PharmaNet informatio­n accessed, said the ministry Monday.

In the majority of cases, the suspect is believed to have accessed patients’ profiles, which contain their name, address, gender, date of birth and personal health number. In some cases, informatio­n such as the patient’s medication history for the last 14 months was also viewed.

To mitigate the risk of identity theft, the government said it will provide free credit monitoring to affected individual­s. People who had their personal informatio­n compromise­d should expect a letter on how to access this service.

The ministries of health, finance, and technology, innovation and citizens’ services have launched an investigat­ion and taken immediate steps to stop the breaches, and is working to implement “more robust security measures” with PharmaNet vendors, said the health ministry.

An independen­t security review of PharmaNet and an overall modernizat­ion of the system, which would include security enhancemen­ts, are also underway.

 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Health Ministry suspects “access was obtained through impersonat­ion of physicians.”
DAMIAN DOVARGANES/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Health Ministry suspects “access was obtained through impersonat­ion of physicians.”

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