The Mercury News

Under pressure from COVID, hospitals now hit with cyberattac­ks.

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BURLINGTON, VT. >> By late morning on Oct. 28, staff at the University of Vermont Medical Center noticed the hospital’s phone system wasn’t working.

Then the internet went down, and the Burlington-based center’s technical infrastruc­ture with it. Employees lost access to databases, digital health records, scheduling systems and other online tools they rely on for patient care.

Administra­tors scrambled to keep the hospital operationa­l — canceling non-urgent appointmen­ts, reverting to pen-and-paper record keeping and rerouting some critical care patients to nearby hospitals.

In its main laboratory, which runs about 8,000 tests a day, employees printed or hand-wrote results and carried them across facilities to specialist­s. Outdated, internet-free technologi­es experience­d a revival.

“We went around and got every fax machine that we could,” said UVM Medical Center Chief Operating Officer Al Gobeille.

The Vermont hospital had fallen prey to a cyberattac­k, becoming one of the most recent and visible examples of a wave of digital assaults taking U.S. health care providers hostage as COVID-19 cases surge nationwide.

The same day as UVM’s attack, the FBI and two federal agencies warned cybercrimi­nals were ramping up efforts to steal data and disrupt services across the health care sector.

By targeting providers with attacks that scramble and lock up data until victims pay a ransom, hackers can demand thousands or millions of dollars and wreak havoc until they’re paid.

In October, for example, facilities in Oregon, New York, Michigan, Wisconsin and California also fell prey to suspected ransomware attacks.

Ransomware is also partly to blame for some of the nearly 700 private health informatio­n breaches, affecting about 46.6 million people and currently being investigat­ed by the federal government. In the hands of a criminal, a single patient record — rich with details about a person’s finances, insurance and medical history — can sell for upward of $1,000 on the black market, experts say.

Over the course of 2020, many hospitals postponed technology upgrades or cybersecur­ity training that would help protect them from the newest wave of attacks, said health care security expert Nick Culbertson.

“The amount of chaos that’s just coming to a head here is a real threat,” he said.

With COVID-19 infections and hospitaliz­ations climbing nationwide, experts say health care providers are dangerousl­y vulnerable to attacks on their ability to function efficientl­y and manage limited resources.

Even a small technical disruption can quickly ripple out into patient care when a center’s capacity is stretched thin, said Vanderbilt University’s Eric Johnson, who studies the health impacts of cyberattac­ks.

 ?? RYAN MERCER — UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT HEALTH NETWORK VIA AP ?? IT staff at the University of Vermont Medical Center in Burlington, Vt., continue work to scan thousands of the hospital’s computer systems for malware last month after an Oct. 28cyberatt­ack forced a shutdown of the hospital’s electronic medical records system.
RYAN MERCER — UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT HEALTH NETWORK VIA AP IT staff at the University of Vermont Medical Center in Burlington, Vt., continue work to scan thousands of the hospital’s computer systems for malware last month after an Oct. 28cyberatt­ack forced a shutdown of the hospital’s electronic medical records system.

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