Current:Home > FinanceHCA Healthcare says hackers stole data on 11 million patients -DollarDynamic
HCA Healthcare says hackers stole data on 11 million patients
View
Date:2025-04-17 08:41:14
Hospital and clinic operator HCA Healthcare said it has suffered a major hack that risks the data of at least 11 million patients.
Patients in 20 states, including California, Florida, Georgia and Texas, are affected, the Nashville-based chain said on Monday. The data accessed includes potentially sensitive information such as the patients' names, partial addresses, contact information and upcoming appointment date.
The breach, which the company learned about on July 5, is one of the biggest health care breaches in history.
The hackers accessed the following information, according to HCA Healthcare:
- Patient name, city, state, and zip code
- Patient email, telephone number, date of birth, gender
- Patient service date, location and next appointment date
"This appears to be a theft from an external storage location exclusively used to automate the formatting of email messages," the company said in its Monday announcement.
"The company disabled user access to the storage location as an immediate containment measure and plans to contact any impacted patients to provide additional information and support, in accordance with its legal and regulatory obligations, and will offer credit monitoring and identity protection services, where appropriate," it said.
If 11 million patients are affected, the breach would rank in the top five health care hacks reported to the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Civil Rights, according to the Associated Press. The worst such hack, a 2015 breach of the medical insurer Anthem, affected 79 million people. Chinese spies were indicted in that case, and there is no evidence the stolen data was ever put up for sale.
The suspected HCA hacker, who first posted a sample of stolen data online on July 5, was trying to sell the data and apparently trying to extort HCA, the AP reported. The hacker, who claimed to have 27.7 million records, then dumped a file online on Monday that included nearly 1 million records from the company's San Antonio division.
Call before paying an HCA bill
HCA is asking patients not to pay any invoices or billing requests without first calling the chain at (844) 608-1803 to verify that the message is legitimate.
HCA added that it "reported this event to law enforcement and retained third-party forensic and threat intelligence advisors." It also claimed that the breach, which revealed at least 27 million rows of data on about 11 million patients, didn't include potentially sensitive information, including patients' treatment or diagnosis; payment information, passwords, driver's license numbers or Social Security numbers.
DataBreaches.net, which first reported on the hack, posted a sample of code purportedly offered by a hacker containing the sentence, "Following up about your lung cancer assessment" as well as a client ID.
However, an HCA spokesperson told CBS MoneyWatch that the code in question was an email template developed by the company, while the client ID referred to a doctor's office or facility, not a patient.
HCA claimed that it "has not identified evidence of any malicious activity on HCA Healthcare networks or systems related to this incident. The company disabled user access to the storage location as an immediate containment measure and plans to contact any impacted patients to provide additional information and support, in accordance with its legal and regulatory obligations, and will offer credit monitoring and identity protection services, where appropriate."
HCA operates more than 180 hospitals and 2,000 care locations, such as walk-in clinics, across 20 states and the U.K., according to the company's website.
- In:
- Data Breach
veryGood! (411)
Related
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- It's official! UPS and Teamsters ratify new labor contract avoiding massive strike
- Lawsuit settled over widespread abuse of former students at shuttered West Virginia boarding school
- Sneak peek at 'The Hill' baseball movie: First look at emotional Dennis Quaid scene
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Gwyneth Paltrow’s Body Double Says She Developed Eating Disorder After Shallow Hal Movie Release
- Rudy Giuliani surrenders at Fulton County Jail for Georgia RICO charges
- Theodore Roosevelt presidential library taking shape in North Dakota Badlands
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Abortion bans are fueling a rise in high-risk patients heading to Illinois hospitals
Ranking
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- California may pay unemployment to striking workers. But the fund to cover it is already insolvent
- TikToker VonViddy Dies by Suicide at 32
- Build Your Capsule Wardrobe With These 31 Affordable Top-Rated Amazon Must-Haves
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- New game by Elden Ring developer delivers ace apocalyptic mech combat
- New York golfer charged with animal cruelty after goose killed with golf club
- 'She's special': Aces' A'ja Wilson ties WNBA single-game scoring record with 53-point effort
Recommendation
Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
New game by Elden Ring developer delivers ace apocalyptic mech combat
Martin Luther King Jr’s ‘I Have a Dream’ speech turns 60 as fresh civil rights battles emerge
'Blue Beetle' is a true-blue surprise
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
California shop owner killed over Pride flag was adamant she would never take it down, friend says
Betty Tyson dies at 75, spent 25 years in New York prison before murder conviction was overturned
Summer School 7: Negotiating and the empathetic nibble