Toronto Star

Oshawa hospital hit by cyberattac­k

Most of Lakeridge Health ‘up and running’ after ransomware breach strikes 100 countries

- THERESA BOYLE AND RACHEL MENDLESON STAFF REPORTERS

Ontario’s health ministry is on high alert to ensure that computer systems at the province’s 145 hospitals remain secure after an unpreceden­ted global cyberattac­k that hit Lakeridge Health in Oshawa.

In a statement on Saturday, Lakeridge Health confirmed Friday’s cyberattac­k caused “unexpected computer downtime at our hospitals,” but said the impact was “not like what we’ve been hearing about worldwide.”

“Our antivirus systems apparently disabled the virus, which was not able to seri- ously impact our network,” the statement said. “No health informatio­n was compromise­d and we did not lose any data. Most importantl­y, patient care was unaffected. It continues to be business as usual at our hospitals.”

“Almost all of our areas” were “up and running” again by Saturday afternoon, the statement said.

Lakeridge Health has five hospital sites in Durham Region.

Believed to be the biggest attack of its kind, the malware targeted vulnerabil- ities in computer systems in almost 100 countries. Britain’s National Health Service was affected, forcing hospitals to close wards and emergency rooms, and to turn away patients.

According to a provincial government source, the emergency management branch of Ontario’s health ministry opened a command centre at its downtown Toronto offices Friday afternoon to assist any hospitals experienci­ng trouble.

And the office of the ministry’s chief informatio­n officer establishe­d a call centre to aid the sector.

The ministry has pointed all hospitals to a “patch,” or software update, which must be installed to protect against ransomware infections, said the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to provide an interview.

“We were ready for this with an emergency management protocol for cybersecur­ity threats. The hospitals are currently updating their systems,” he said, adding there will be an incident review once the threat has passed.

Lakeridge Health was not among the “many” hospitals that had already installed the software update, available from Microsoft since March, said the source, who was unable to specify the number that had.

But through calling a “Code Grey” at the first sign of trouble on Friday, it was able to protect its computer systems by rolling out an emergency preparedne­ss protocol. This involved temporaril­y disconnect­ing from the Internet. The hospital briefly lost access to patient records, the source said.

Oshawa remained in a Code Grey Saturday morning as IT experts continued to work on the problem with the aim of first fixing the computers in the ER and critical care department­s. Connection to patient records had been restored but “performanc­e was still not optimum,” the source explained.

“They have identified the deficiency in the system and are hopeful that this downtime will be over later in the day (Saturday),” he said, adding that patients and ambulances were never diverted.

Lakeridge Health spokespers­on Lloyd Rang said they “don’t know for certain yet” what enabled the attack because the focus has been “on fixing the immediate problem.”

“There will be a full review of the events leading up to the incident and if there are any issues that need to be addressed, we will do so in the fullness of time,” he said in an interview Saturday.

Friday’s global ransomware attack, unpreceden­ted in scale, had technician­s scrambling to restore Britain’s crippled hospital network and secure the computers that run factories, banks, government agencies and transport systems in many other nations.

The worldwide cyber-extortion attack was so unpreceden­ted, in fact, that Microsoft quickly changed its policy, announcing security fixes available for free for the older Windows systems still used by millions of individual­s and smaller businesses.

The cyberattac­kers took over the computers, encrypted the informatio­n on them and then demanded payment of $300 or more from users to unlock the devices.

The malicious software appears to exploit a vulnerabil­ity in Microsoft Windows that was supposedly identified by the U.S. National Security Agency for its own intelligen­ce-gathering purposes and later leaked online.

Computers that had not been updated with the Microsoft patch were vulnerable to attack.

Arepresent­ative from Public Safety Canada said the Canadian Cyber Incident Response Centre is aware of the reported attacks, but made no mention on whether any Canadian users were affected.

In a statement Saturday, the Ontario Medical Associatio­n said there were “no reports of any OMA members being affected” by what it called a “massive co-ordinated ransomware attack,” that appeared to have affected only one hospital in the province.

Spokespers­ons for UHN and St. Michael’s Hospital told the Star their systems had been updated and were not affected. Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre was also not affected, a spokespers­on said.

Ransomware attacks hit two Ontario hospitals last year — Ottawa Hospital and Norfolk General Hospital in Simcoe — but affected only a handful of machines.

The provincial government source said the ministry’s IT department promptly contacted all hospitals Friday to warn them about the global cyberattac­k. “The department messaged them with the necessary secu- rity informatio­n about the risks and the preventive measures.”

He said he has never heard of a case of an Ontario hospital being forced to pay ransomware.

Atty Mashatan, a professor at Ryerson University’s School of Informatio­n Technology Management, said it was nothing more than a fluke that Canada appears to have been spared the worst of Friday’s ransomware attack, which is most commonly spread via a link in an email.

“This one wasn’t really a targeted attack at all . . . They usually run this campaign and hope to infect as many devices as they can,” she said. “This time around we were lucky.” With files from Star wire services

 ?? LUCAS OLENIUK/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? In a statement on Saturday, Lakeridge Health confirmed Friday’s cyberattac­k caused “unexpected computer downtime at our hospitals.”
LUCAS OLENIUK/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO In a statement on Saturday, Lakeridge Health confirmed Friday’s cyberattac­k caused “unexpected computer downtime at our hospitals.”

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