Major ransomware attack hits U.S. healthcare payment processor, deemed the worst incident ever
OAN’s Brooke Mallory
6:16 PM – Friday, March 1, 2024
The CEO of the American Hospital Association, Rick Pollack, declared on Thursday night that the aftermath of a recent ransomware attack on the nation’s largest health care payment processor is “the most serious incident of its kind leveled against a U.S. health care organization.”
A widely used program that helps healthcare professionals handle insurance claims and patient payments has been rendered useless by the attack on Change Healthcare. As a standard countermeasure, the corporation has taken the majority of its systems offline to stop the attack from spreading.
“Nine days into the attack on Change Healthcare, a health care technology company that is part of Optum and owned by UnitedHealth Group, effects are continuing to be felt throughout the entire health care system,” Pollack said in a news release. The American Hospital Association is the country’s largest healthcare industry group.
The impact of the outage on small and midsize healthcare providers has been catastrophic. Physicians told CNBC that the disruption has stopped insurance companies from paying doctors and has even stopped them from electronically-filling prescriptions.
However, Change announced later on Friday that it has finished a new workaround for its electronic prescription service, which is now accessible to all users right away.
According to Change, it handles a third of all patient records in the United States and executes 15 billion health care transactions annually.
A representative for UnitedHealth Group, the parent firm of Change Healthcare, said via email that thousands of pharmacies are utilizing “offline processing workarounds.” According to the spokesperson, over 90% of the more than 70,000 pharmacies in the United States that utilize Change Healthcare’s payment processor use other methods for processing payments.
On its website, UnitedHealth Group disclosed that it had learned about the attack on February 21st and that hackers had used Alphv, a type of ransomware.
Although it seems to have partially recovered, a consortium of American and European law enforcement agencies announced an operation to disrupt Alpv in December.
A representative for Change Healthcare said in a statement that the organization is collaborating with U.S. law enforcement and has hired two significant cybersecurity firms, Mandiant, which is owned by Google, and Palo Alto, to assist with recovery.
According to an email from the FBI on Friday afternoon, support is being provided by the Department of Health and Human Services, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, and the FBI itself.
Stay informed! Receive breaking news blasts directly to your inbox for free. Subscribe here. https://www.oann.com/alerts
Fulton County Judge McAfee to Rule on the Fani Willis Case, James Biden ‘Repaying’ Loan with China Money, and FBI Investigates Balloon
Activists and Teachers Sue Temecula Valley Unified School District Over Transgender Parental Notification Policy and Critical Race Theory Ban
Texas Republican Lawmaker Rep. Lance Gooden Sheds Light on Federal Funding Loopholes Regarding Illegal Immigration
Consumer Sentiment Report Shows Slight Decline in February Compared to Previous Month
Elon Musk Alleges Breach of Contract and Departure from Original Mission in AI Development
Stock Market’s Interest in AI Rises with Nvidia’s Rally and Potential Impact on Various Sectors
UnitedHealth Group Faces Major Data Breach as Hackers Claim to Have Stolen Millions of Sensitive Records
Legal Battle Ensues as X Challenges Center for Countering Digital Hate’s Criticism of Hate Speech
rnrn
What actions are Change Healthcare and UnitedHealth Group taking to recover from the attack
OAN’s Brooke Mallory
6:16 PM – Friday, March 1, 2024
The CEO of the American Hospital Association, Rick Pollack, declared on Thursday night that the aftermath of a recent ransomware attack on the nation’s largest healthcare payment processor is “the most serious incident of its kind leveled against a U.S. healthcare organization.”
A widely used program that helps healthcare professionals handle insurance claims and patient payments has been rendered useless by the attack on Change Healthcare. As a standard countermeasure, the corporation has taken the majority of its systems offline to stop the attack from spreading.
“Nine days into the attack on Change Healthcare, a healthcare technology company that is part of Optum and owned by UnitedHealth Group, effects are continuing to be felt throughout the entire healthcare system,” Pollack said in a news release. The American Hospital Association is the country’s largest healthcare industry group.
The impact of the outage on small and midsize healthcare providers has been catastrophic. Physicians told CNBC that the disruption has stopped insurance companies from paying doctors and has even stopped them from electronically filling prescriptions.
However, Change announced later on Friday that it has finished a new workaround for its electronic prescription service, which is now accessible to all users right away.
According to Change, it handles a third of all patient records in the United States and executes 15 billion healthcare transactions annually.
A representative for UnitedHealth Group, the parent firm of Change Healthcare, said via email that thousands of pharmacies are utilizing “offline processing workarounds.” According to the spokesperson, over 90% of the more than 70,000 pharmacies in the United States that utilize Change Healthcare’s payment processor use other methods for processing payments.
On its website, UnitedHealth Group disclosed that it had learned about the attack on February 21st and that hackers had used Alphv, a type of ransomware.
Although it seems to have partially recovered, a consortium of American and European law enforcement agencies announced an operation to disrupt Alpv in December.
A representative for Change Healthcare said in a statement that the organization is collaborating with U.S. law enforcement and has hired two significant cybersecurity firms, Mandiant, which is owned by Google, and Palo Alto, to assist with recovery.
According to an email from the FBI on Friday af
" Conservative News Daily does not always share or support the views and opinions expressed here; they are just those of the writer."
Now loading...