Detroit Free Press

Over 1M in Mich. affected by breach

Communicat­ion service for Corewell Health hit by cyberattac­k, opens assistance hotline

- Kristen Jordan Shamus

More than 1 million Michigande­rs were affected by a cybersecur­ity breach at Welltok Inc., a software company contracted to provide communicat­ion services for Corewell Health’s southeaste­rn Michigan properties along with a healthy lifestyle portal for Priority Health, an insurance plan owned by Corewell.

For about 2,500 Priority Health members, names, addresses and health insurance identifica­tion numbers were compromise­d, the health plan said in a statement.

For about 1 million Corewell Health patients, the compromise­d data includes names, dates of birth, email addresses, phone numbers, medical diagnoses, health insurance informatio­n and Social Security numbers.

Attack hit nearly 8.5 million people nationally

Welltok, which is owned by Virgin Pulse, sent letters earlier this month to people affected by the massive breach. According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office for Civil Rights, which publishes a list of all breaches of protected health informatio­n that are under investigat­ion involving 500 or more people, the Welltok cyberattac­k affected 8,493,379 people.

Those affected included people who have received health care or insurance provided by the following companies, according to Welltok: Asuris Northwest Health

BridgeSpan Health

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota and Blue Plus

Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Alabama Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina

Faith Regional Health Services

Hospital & Medical Foundation of Paris, Inc. dba Horizon Health

Mass General Brigham Health Plan Regence BlueCross BlueShield of Oregon Regence BlueShield

Regence BlueCross BlueShield of Utah Regence Blue Shield of Idaho

St. Bernards Healthcare

Sutter Health

Trane Technologi­es Company LLC and/or group health plans sponsored by Trane Technologi­es Company LLC or Trane U.S. Inc.

The group health plans of Stanford Health Care, of Stanford Health Care, Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford, Stanford Health Care Tri-Valley, Stanford Medicine Partners, and Packard Children’s Health Alliance

The Guthrie Clinic

Breach went undetected for more than two months

In a statement, Welltok said it “takes this in

cident very seriously” and recommends credit monitoring for those affected by the breach, which occurred May 30 when a cyberattac­ker exploited software vulnerabil­ities on the MOVEit Transfer server, which is supposed to provide the secure digital transfer of sensitive informatio­n, including protected health informatio­n.

Welltok said it had installed all the required MOVEit Transfer security upgrades and patches as soon as they were available and conducted an examinatio­n of its networks and systems to identify any potential for compromise­d data. It wasn’t until Aug. 11, after the company hired third-party cybersecur­ity specialist­s and reconstruc­ted its systems and historical data, that the breach was discovered.

“While we have no evidence that any of your informatio­n has been misused, we are notifying you and providing informatio­n and resources to help protect your personal informatio­n,” Welltok said in a statement.

“The following types of informatio­n may have impacted: name and address, telephone number, email address. The type of informatio­n at issue varies for each person. For a small group of impacted clients, Social Security numbers, Medicare/Medicaid ID numbers, or certain health insurance informatio­n such as plan or group name, were also implicated. For other individual­s, certain health informatio­n such as a provider name, prescripti­on name, or treatment code may have been included.”

Welltok opened a dedicated assistance line at 800-628-2141 to help address any questions people may have.

Cybersecur­ity attacks are a growing problem in health care

The HIPAA Journal reported that the cyberattac­k at Welltok is the fourth-largest health care data breach in the U.S. this year. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services reported that data breaches among health care organizati­ons more than doubled from 2019 to 2021. And in 2022, at least 28.5 million health care records were breached.

In Michigan alone, several have been reported in recent months, including one that affected 2.5 million patients of McLaren Health Care.

A ransomware attack took down the computer network at McLaren’s 14 Michigan hospitals in late August and early September. The health system acknowledg­ed in October that it also could have leaked some patient data onto the dark web. A ransomware gang known as BlackCat/AlphV claimed responsibi­lity for the cyberattac­k, posting online that it stole 6 terabytes of McLaren’s data.

And in late August, the University of Michigan shut down its campus computer network after a hacker got access to the personal informatio­n of students and applicants, alumni and donors, employees and contractor­s, as well as the personal health informatio­n of research study participan­ts, and patients of the University Health Service and the School of Dentistry.

The data that was compromise­d in the U-M cyberattac­k varied, but for some included Social Security numbers, driver’s license or other government-issued ID numbers, financial account and payment card numbers. For others, it also included medical record numbers, diagnoses, treatment or medication history, and other clinical informatio­n.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States