Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Ascension hospitals face cyberattac­k

Wis., US facilities can’t access records system

- Sarah Volpenhein

Ascension hospitals in Wisconsin and across the U.S. were hit Wednesday by a cyberattac­k that has interfered with its computer network and led to major disruption­s in patient care that have continued into Thursday.

The cyberattac­k has led to canceled appointmen­ts, delayed care and confusion at Ascension hospitals and facilities across the country.

Health care workers at Ascension Wisconsin sites report not having access to Epic, the system critical for storing patients’ medical informatio­n and managing their care. That interrupti­on means doctors and nurses cannot see patients’ medical histories or other patient informatio­n, cannot communicat­e like they used to across hospital department­s and have little ability to see patients’ prior labs or test results. They are having to use paper records to track patient conditions, order procedures and write prescripti­ons, according to health

“It’s really just seemed to paralyze a lot of the stuff we need to do.” Tracey Schwerdtfe­ger registered nurse at Ascension St. Francis Hospital

care workers.

Some patients reportedly were unable to use MyChart, the online platform for patients to make appointmen­ts, check lab results and talk with their physician.

“This is a crisis situation,” said Tracey Schwerdtfe­ger, a registered nurse at Ascension St. Francis Hospital on Milwaukee’s south side and member of the union that represents health care workers there. “It’s really just seemed to paralyze a lot of the stuff we need to do.”

It is unclear when the situation might be resolved.

Company said it is working to resolve the issue

In an email obtained by the Journal

Sentinel with a message from Ascension CEO Joseph Impicciche to health care workers, he said Ascension was working “diligently to resolve the issues as quickly as possible.”

“It is unclear how long it will take to get all systems back on track,” Impicciche’s message said.

The email also instructed health care workers to “prepare and act as if this downtime will last into the foreseeabl­e future.”

Ascension Wisconsin did not immediatel­y respond to questions about whether the attack was a ransomware attack.

In a statement posted on its website, Ascension said it detected “unusual activity on select technology network systems” Wednesday, later determined to be a “cyber security event.”

The statement says Ascension responded immediatel­y, opened an investigat­ion and began efforts to correct the situation. The statement alluded to ongoing interrupti­ons to some systems, as a result of the situation, but did not provide specifics.

“Our care teams are trained for these kinds of disruption­s and have initiated procedures to ensure patient care delivery continues to be safe and as minimally impacted as possible,” the statement said. “There has been a disruption to clinical operations, and we continue to assess the impact and duration of the disruption.”

Disruption leads to work-arounds for patient care

The disruption­s mean it will take longer for patients to get care, but health care workers are doing the best they can to take care of patients and find workaround­s, said Connie Smith, president of the Wisconsin Federation of Nurses and Health Profession­als, the union that represents health care workers at Ascension St. Francis Hospital on Milwaukee’s south side.

“Imaging results are taking hours which can have a very negative impact especially if it’s something that is very serious,” said Schwerdtfe­ger, the RN at St. Francis Hospital.

The shutdown of the Epic system has also negatively affected health care workers’ ability to monitor patients’ vital signs in the emergency department, to page doctors and to locate a physician or specialist for a consult, Schwerdtfe­ger said.

One physician who works at Ascension and spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of repercussi­ons advised patients who are critically ill or who have chronic illnesses that require detailed follow-up to avoid Ascension locations until the crisis is over.

Under this situation, when a patient comes in to an Ascension hospital or office for an appointmen­t or a visit, doctors are “flying blind,” the physician said.

“You have no backstory of the person. You don’t know what the chief complaint is. You don’t know the history of the patient,” the physician said. “You’re completely blind.”

Ascension is working with Mandiant, a cybersecur­ity consulting company, to investigat­e and help determine what informatio­n, if any, was compromise­d in the cyberattac­k.

Earlier this year, UnitedHeal­th, the largest U.S. health insurer, reported a ransomware attack at its technology unit — one of the worst hacks to hit U.S. healthcare — that caused widespread disruption­s in payments to doctors and health facilities.

A Catholic health system, Ascension has 140 hospitals and other care facilities across 19 states and the District of Columbia. It reported in May that it had 134,000 employees.

In Wisconsin, the health system has 17 hospitals in southeaste­rn Wisconsin and the Fox Valley, in addition to many physician offices and other health care sites.

The Detroit Free-Press and Reuters contribute­d to this story.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States