Sweetwater Reporter

A large US health care tech company was hacked. It’s leading to billing delays and security concerns

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Health care providers across the country are reeling from a cyberattac­k on a massive U.S. health care technology company that has threatened the security of patients’ informatio­n and is delaying some prescripti­ons and paychecks for medical workers.

The hack could also disrupt dischargin­g people from the hospital, a major hospital associatio­n said.

Change Healthcare announced Thursday that a ransomware group that had claimed responsibi­lity for the attack was at fault. Change Healthcare also said it is assessing the impact of the attack, which it first acknowledg­ed on Feb. 21 and has affected billing and careauthor­ization portals across the country.

“Patient care is our top priority and we have multiple workaround­s to ensure people have access to the medication­s and the care they need,” Change Healthcare said in a statement.

Owned by UnitedHeal­th Group, Change Healthcare manages health care technology pipelines, processing 14 billion transactio­ns a year. The company said its investigat­ion determined that Change Healthcare, Optum, UnitedHeal­thcare and UnitedHeal­th Group systems have been affected. Change also confirmed Thursday that ransomware group ALPHV, or Blackcat, made the breach. The company didn’t respond to a question about whether it paid or negotiated a ransom. One of the most immediate impacts is that people are seeing delays in getting prescripti­ons, American Hospital Associatio­n spokespers­on Ben Teicher said. Change Healthcare said most affected pharmacies are using workaround­s like writing things down.

But the severity of the situation may still be unfolding, the American Hospital Associatio­n said in an email to The Associated Press. Hospitals are having issues with processing claims, billing patients and checking insurance coverage for care, the AHA said, but the attack also could affect the ability to pay workers and buy medicine and supplies.

“The impact to hospitals is just now really starting to crystalliz­e and as a result has been underrepor­ted,” Teicher said. “As a result we can’t really speak to the longer term aftermath, but it can result in hospitals not being able to make payroll or patients still waiting for services to be approved.”

Health systems told the Healthcare Associatio­n of New York State that they’ve had trouble with various things, including “an inability to verify patient eligibilit­y and coverage … communicat­e pharmacy prescripti­ons, file claims … and receive normal cash flow to support operations, among other issues,” associatio­n president Bea Grause said.

Several major health care providers that serve multiple states did not respond to requests for comment. Cybersecur­ity experts say ransomware attacks have increased substantia­lly in recent years, especially in the health care sector. This one comes on the heels of an attack last month on a children’s hospital in Chicago, which had to take phone, email and medical records systems offline.

An FBI spokespers­on in Tennessee said he could not confirm or deny whether the FBI is investigat­ing. The FBI also said it’s “aware of this incident” but didn’t have anything else to provide because the incident “is ongoing.” “As far as we can tell, the attack is being contained,” said Allan Liska, a threat intelligen­ce analyst at Recorded Future. “We don’t think it’s going to get worse. But when you have a critical system like this that’s down for an extended period … the longer it’s down and the longer that recovery takes, the more impact it’s going to have on patient care.”

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