The Office of Information Technology at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs has disputed a finding by the agency's Inspector General that several VA centers routinely transmit unencrypted sensitive personal data over the public Internet.
The probe by the IG's office was launched following a complaint last year that three VA Medical Centers in the Midwest Health Care Network were transmitting personally identifiable information over unencrypted telecommunications carrier networks.
The investigation found the allegations to be true, said VA assistant inspector general for audit and evaluations Linda Halliday in a report released this week.
Investigators from the IG's office visited the three VA medical centers cited in the complaint. They centers are located in Fort Meade and Sioux Falls, S.D., and in Omaha, Neb.
The IG's office discovered that unencrypted sensitive information, including names, Social Security Numbers, dates of birth, and protected health information of veterans and their dependents, were sent from the targeted VA centers to other VA facilities, the report said.
In addition, the two facilities in South Dakota regularly used the same unencrypted telecommunications carrier network to transmit sensitive data such as x-rays and other radiographic patient images to external organizations.
IT staff at the VA centers told investigators that sending unencrypted sensitive data to other VA centers and to outside business partners was a common practice at more than just the three centers involved in the probe.
The transmission of unencrypted personal data violates internal VA security rules and does not satisfy Federal Information Security Management Act requirements. "Despite VA and [FISMA] requirements, VA has not implemented a configuration control that would ensure encryption of sensitive data," the report said.
"Unencrypted sensitive VA data could be used to perpetrate various types of fraud, including tax fraud," the report cautioned.
The report called on the VA to immediately implement encryption controls to protect data during transmission.
Roger Baker, VA assistant secretary for information and technology, rejected the IG's assertions.
He contended that personally identifiable information is not transmitted in the clear by any VA center.
Baker said the carrier networks used by the VA to transmit sensitive data to are completely segmented and not exposed to the public Internet. The VA, he said, uses a Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) service from its carriers to ensure it has a private and segmented network for transmitting data.
"These carrier services provide VA with a private network and do not place traffic on the Internet," he said.
Baker conceded that the network links investigated by the IG's office were not using encryption but insisted the data was not traversing the public Internet.
When the complaint reached the VA last year, the agency's IT team inspected the communications circuits that were involved, reviewed all associated network equipment and interviewed network administrators, Baker said. "All of the findings conclusively substantiated that traffic is traversing only VA's private network," he said
Even so, the VA's IT organization has initiated a comprehensive review to ensure that sensitive data is being routed in a secure manner, he noted.