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By Raphael Satter

Washington: Hospital operator Ascension told Maine’s state attorney general on Friday that nearly 5.6 million people were affected in a ransomware attack that hit it earlier this year.

The company said an unspecified amount of medical data – including patients’ medical records, lab tests and insurance information – was compromised.

Cybercriminals use ransomware to paralyze computer networks and extort a payment, typically in cryptocurrency. Many also steal data for added leverage.

Hospitals and healthcare providers – whose data is particularly sensitive and whose operations are especially critical – have regularly been targeted.

In a letter to the attorney general, Ascension’s lawyer said the incident happened on May 7 and 8 and blamed it on a “cybercriminal”, whom the company did not identify. Ascension did not immediately return a message seeking further comment.

The hack disrupted clinical operations, Reuters reported at the time.

Founded as a Catholic nonprofit in 1999, the Ascension network has about 134,000 associates, 35,000 affiliated providers and 140 hospitals, serving 19 states and the District of Columbia.

This year a particularly damaging intrusion at UnitedHealth affected the information of 100 million people. (Reporting by Raphael Satter in Washington and AJ Vicens in Detroit.)

  • Published On Dec 21, 2024 at 11:55 AM IST

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