Chicago Sun-Times

Lurie Children’s Hospital takes systems offline, investigat­es ‘cybersecur­ity matter’

- BY PHYLLIS CHA, STAFF REPORTER pcha@suntimes.com | @phyllischa Contributi­ng: Kade Heather

A systems outage at Lurie Children’s Hospital that began Wednesday is a cybersecur­ity matter, the hospital said.

“We are taking this very seriously, are investigat­ing with the support of leading experts, and are working in collaborat­ion with law enforcemen­t agencies. As part of our response to this matter, we have taken network systems offline,” the hospital said in a statement Thursday night.

The hospital is open and providing care, the statement said. The outage is affecting phone, email and electronic systems.

A call center was establishe­d Friday evening to help patient families and community providers. Calls are accepted at (800) 5437362 Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.;

Saturday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.; and Sunday, 8 a.m. to noon.

Call center workers can help with nonurgent patient requests and questions, prescripti­on refills, and provide informatio­n about scheduled appointmen­ts.

That might have helped Jennifer Sabourin avoid a frustratin­g situation earlier this week.

Her 9-year-old daughter was to undergo an endoscopy on Wednesday and have surgery in three weeks. But she didn’t find out until after she and her daughter drove to the hospital from their west-suburban home that the appointmen­t had been canceled.

“I was so angry,” she said Thursday. Her daughter had fasted Tuesday night to prepare, and missed school on Wednesday, and Sabourin had taken the day off work.

“I was mostly frustrated that there was no way to contact patients to say we want you to be aware of what’s happening,” she added. “I will be even more frustrated if her surgery gets affected because of this.”

Sabourin said she worries about privacy and a data breach, but her main concern is that the hospital is not yet functionin­g as normal.

“What surprises me is how long it is taking to resolve the issue,” she said Friday. “The effects of this breach are going to last long after the network is restored.”

Natalie Davis, who lives in Michigan, decided not to make the two-hour drive Thursday for an appointmen­t after seeing parents on social media saying their appointmen­ts had been canceled.

“Obviously, we understood what was happening was out of their control, but it is still just a little frustratin­g,” Davis told the SunTimes via Facebook Messenger on Thursday.

Jason Castillo’s 7-month-old daughter was supposed to have heart surgery on Wednesday, he said. She was waiting for anesthesia when the surgery was called off, he said.

“It’s disappoint­ing to know that such a respected and prestigiou­s institutio­n didn’t have the proper security in place,” he said.

He said his daughter’s surgery luckily wasn’t an emergency, but he wished initial communicat­ions from the hospital regarding the outage were clearer.

“We wanted this surgery done and to move forward with our lives past the surgery, but we’re very lucky in a lot of ways that we don’t have a life or death situation right now,” he said.

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