USA TODAY US Edition

UnitedHeal­th firm handling health records was hacked

- Ken Alltucker

U.S. health officials urged insurance companies to take immediate steps to ease a digital logjam after a data hack that snarled administra­tive functions for hospitals, doctors, pharmacies and millions of patients.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services asked insurers Tuesday to waive prior authorizat­ions and Medicare’s contractor­s to accept paper bills from doctors and hospitals. These temporary measures aim to address problems that have emerged from the data hack of an influentia­l company owned by UnitedHeal­th Group.

On Feb. 21, Change Healthcare, a property of UnitedHeal­th Group, disclosed that hackers had disrupted operations for the company that processes 15 billion health-related transactio­ns a year. Change Healthcare operates a digital “clearingho­use” that connects doctors, hospitals and other providers with insurance companies that pay for medical care and authorize medical services. Since news of the hack became public, doctors and hospitals have been unable to bill for some services and patients have had trouble picking up prescripti­ons.

Last Thursday, UnitedHeal­th Group said a ransomware group known as ALPHV or Blackcat was responsibl­e for the attack that disrupted billing and authorizat­ion systems nationwide.

On Tuesday, HHS said it expected UnitedHeal­th to do “everything in its power to ensure continuity of operations” for doctors, hospitals and other health providers. HHS also pushed companies that serve patients enrolled in Medicare to address problems prompted by the cyberattac­k. Among those steps:

The federal government has advised Medicare health plans to remove or relax requiremen­ts that patients or doctors obtain prior authorizat­ion before undergoing a medical test or procedure. Insurers also have been asked to halt “timely filing” rules that address when health providers must submit payment claims. Private Medicare plans also should offer “advance funding” to affected medical providers.

⬤ HHS has asked private contractor­s who serve Medicare to accept paper claims from medical providers. Hospitals, doctors and other providers have sometimes reverted to paper claims as a workaround when a data breach or cyberattac­k disrupts computer systems.

⬤ HHS also invited hospitals facing “significan­t cash flow problems” since the hack to ask for accelerate­d payments from Medicare contractor­s. The agency also advised hospitals and doctors to switch to a different payment clearingho­use and contact a private Medicare contractor in their region.

The HHS steps were announced one day after the American Medical Associatio­n, an influentia­l doctors group, asked the Biden administra­tion to provide emergency financial relief to doctors affected by the cyberattac­k.

On Tuesday, American Medical Associatio­n President Jesse M. Ehrenfeld said the federal government’s actions are a “welcome first step” but urged the agency overseeing Medicare to “recognize that physicians are experienci­ng financial struggles that threaten the viability of many medical practices.”

The American Hospital Associatio­n on Monday blasted the plan by UnitedHeal­th to provide temporary financial assistance to hospitals harmed by the data attack. The trade group said the health insurance giant’s funding proposal offered “one-sided contractua­l terms” and limited eligibilit­y.

The cyberattac­k this year is by no means an anomaly.

Last year, about 1 in 3 Americans were affected by health-related data breaches. The number of attacks has surged in recent years. They are often carried out by organized hackers operating overseas who target the computer systems of health providers and the vendors and companies that serve them. Most of the largest hacks have targeted vendors who bill, mail or provide other services for hospitals, doctors and other health providers.

Last year, data breaches exposed a record 133 million health records. And last year an average of two health data hacks or thefts of at least 500 records were carried out daily in the U.S.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States