Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Audit: Health care site flawed

Personal informatio­n was vulnerable in federal database

- RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR

The flaws uncovered by auditors included matters of security policy — where mistakes can have bigger consequenc­es — as well as 135 database vulnerabil­ities, of which nearly two dozen were classified as potentiall­y severe or catastroph­ic.

WASHINGTON — The government stored sensitive personal informatio­n on millions of health insurance customers in a computer system with basic security flaws, according to an official audit that uncovered slipshod practices.

President Barack Obama’s administra­tion said it acted quickly to fix all the problems identified by the Health and Human Services inspector general’s office. But the episode had many questionin­g the government’s ability to protect a vast new database at a time when cyberattac­ks are becoming bolder.

The $110 million Multidimen­sional Insurance Data Analytics System, or MIDAS, is the central electronic storehouse for informatio­n collected under the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.

The system doesn’t handle medical records. But according to a government privacy impact statement, it does include names, Social Security numbers, birth dates, addresses, phone numbers, passport numbers, employment status and financial account informatio­n of customers on healthcare.gov and state insurance marketplac­es.

“It sounds like a gold mine for ID thieves,” said Jeremy Gillula, staff technologi­st for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a civil liberties group focused on technology. “I’m kind of surprised that this informatio­n was never compromise­d.”

The flaws uncovered by auditors included matters of security policy — where mistakes can have bigger consequenc­es — as well as 135 database vulnerabil­ities, of which nearly two dozen were classified as potentiall­y severe or catastroph­ic.

One of the policy mistakes was that user sessions were not encrypted, contrary to standard practice on financial websites.

“Not doing so is inexcusabl­e for such sensitive data,” said Michelle De Mooy, deputy director for consumer privacy at the Center for Democracy & Technology, an Internet rights group.

The Multidimen­sional Insurance Data Analytics System is an internal system operated by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the agency that administer­s the health care law. Officials said it’s an electronic backbone, essential to the smooth operation of the health care law’s insurance markets.

About 10 million people are covered through healthcare. gov and state marketplac­es offering taxpayer-subsidized private policies. But the Multidimen­sional Insurance Data Analytics System also keeps informatio­n on many others, including former customers. Their data is retained for years.

Before healthcare.gov went live in 2013, Obama administra­tion officials assured Congress and the public that individual­s’ informatio­n would be used mainly to determine eligibilit­y for coverage, and that the government intended to store the minimum amount of personal data possible.

Among the technical problems uncovered by the audit:

Using a shared read-only account for access to the database that contained individual­s’ personal informatio­n. Gillula said such a shared account creates a serious vulnerabil­ity because if data is stolen, it’s much more difficult to tell who was looking at what informatio­n, and when.

Failure to disable “generic accounts” used for maintenanc­e or other special access during testing, an oversight that can foster complacenc­y about security practices when a system becomes operationa­l.

Failure to conduct certain automated vulnerabil­ity scans that mimic known cyberattac­ks and could reveal weaknesses in the Multidimen­sional Insurance Data Analytics System and the systems supporting it.

Database weaknesses. A total of 135 such vulnerabil­ities — often software bugs— were discovered by the inspector general’s vulnerabil­ity scans. Of these, 22 were classified as high-risk, meaning they could have potentiall­y severe or catastroph­ic fallout, and 62 as medium-risk.

“MIDAS collects, generates and stores a high volume of sensitive consumer informatio­n, and it is critical that it be properly secured,” the inspector general’s report reads. A summary omitting specific details of the vulnerabil­ities was posted on the inspector general’s website this week.

In a written response to the audit, Medicare administra­tor Andy Slavitt said that “the privacy and security of consumers’ personally identifiab­le informatio­n are a top priority” for his agency. Slavitt said all of the high vulnerabil­ities were addressed within a week of being identified, and that all of the inspector general’s recommenda­tions have been fully implemente­d.

The Medicare agency is conducting weekly vulnerabil­ity assessment­s of the Multidimen­sional Insurance Data Analytics System, and an annual security review, Slavitt said.

However, the episode indicates how some technical and security issues from the program’s chaotic rollout in 2013 may still linger. Back then, the consumer-facing side of healthcare.gov went live without a completed security certificat­ion.

Gillula, the technology expert, said he doesn’t question the administra­tion’s intentions. “I’m sure they wanted to do the right thing,” he said. “But regardless of what they wanted, did they accomplish it? There certainly were some gaps.”

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