Vulnerabilities Identified in Vertikal Systems Hospital Information Management Solution
Vulnerabilities have been identified in the Hospital Manager Backend Services, a hospital information management system from Vertikal Systems. One of the vulnerabilities is a high-severity flaw that can be remotely exploited in a low complexity attack to gain access to and disclose sensitive information. The vulnerabilities affect Hospital Manager Backend Services prior to September 19, 2025. The vulnerabilities have been fixed in the September 19, 2025, release and future releases. Users should ensure that their product is up to date and should contact Vertikal Systems for assistance with fixing the flaws. The most serious vulnerability is tracked as CVE-2025-54459 and has been assigned a CVSS v4 base score of 8.7 (CVSS v3.1 base score 7.5). The flaw is due to the product exposing sensitive information to an unauthorized control sphere. Hospital Manager Backend Services exposed the ASP.NET tracing endpoint /trace.axd without authentication, which means a remote attacker can obtain live request traces and sensitive information such as request metadata, session identifiers,...
George E. Weems & Vibra Hospitals Announce Data Breaches
Data security incidents have recently been announced by George E. Weems Memorial Hospital in Florida, Vibra Hospital of Sacramento in California, the California-based plastic surgeon Michael R. Schwartz, MD, and the California-based biopharmaceutical company Travere Therapeutics. George E. Weems Memorial Hospital On October 20, 2025, George E. Weems Memorial Hospital in Apalachicola, Florida, started mailing notification letters to patients affected by a recent security incident involving unauthorized access to two employee email accounts. The intrusion was detected on May 12, 2025, and the investigation confirmed that the email accounts were subject to unauthorized access from May 6, 2025, to May 12, 2025. The email accounts were reviewed, and on September 22, 2025, the hospital learned that the accounts contained patients’ protected health information, including names, addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, Social Security numbers, driver’s license numbers, account information, patient ID numbers, diagnoses and medical histories, provider names, dates of service, and health...
American Hospital Association Makes Recommendations to Support AI Adoption in Healthcare
The American Hospital Association (AHA) has responded to a September 2025 request for information (RFI) from the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) on regulatory reform on artificial intelligence (AI) to promote innovation and adoption. The Trump administration is committed to ensuring the United States achieves global dominance in AI and issued the RFI to obtain feedback from businesses and the public on current federal regulations that are hampering AI adoption and innovation. AI has tremendous potential in healthcare, from analyzing and interpreting medical images, aiding clinicians with decision-making, streamlining operations, and easing the considerable administrative burden faced by providers. While AI tools have been adopted in healthcare, the AHA says hospitals and health systems have merely scratched the surface of the potential uses to support them and the patients they serve. In order to accelerate innovation and adoption, the AHA believes regulations need to be eased. In its response, the AHA explained that around one-quarter of healthcare spending goes on...
Only 23% of Ransomware Victims Pay the Ransom
The ransomware remediation firm Coveware has reported a growing divide in the ransomware landscape, with larger enterprises facing increasingly targeted, high-cost attacks, whereas attacks on mid-market companies continue to be conducted in volume. Ransomware groups conducting high-volume attacks appear to have found the sweet spot, as while the ransom payments they receive are much lower, the attacks are easier to conduct, and a higher percentage of victims pay up. Attacks on larger companies require more effort, although attacks are far more lucrative when a ransom is paid. Coveware reports that larger organizations are increasingly resisting paying ransoms, having realized that there are few payment benefits, but has warned that these targeted attacks are likely to increase due to falling ransom payments. Across the board, there has been a sharp fall in both the average and median ransom payments from a 6-year high in Q2, 2025, to the lowest level since Q1, 2023. In Q3, 2025, the average ransom payment fell by 66% to $376,941, with the median ransom payment down 65% to $140,000....
Sedgebrook & Heartland Health Center Hit with Ransomware Attacks
Ransomware attacks have recently been announced by the Illinois retirement village and skilled nursing provider Sedgebrook, and the Nebraska healthcare provider Heartland Health Center. Sedgebrook Sedgebrook, a retirement village and skilled nursing facility in Lincolnshire, Illinois, has recently announced a ransomware attack that involved unauthorized access to files containing individuals’ personal and protected health information. The attack was detected on May 5, 2025, when network disruption was experienced. Assisted by third-party digital forensics experts, Sedgebrook determined that a ransomware group had access to its network from May 4 to May 5, 2025, and used ransomware to encrypt files. During that time, data may have been exfiltrated from its network. The exposed files were reviewed, and on August 26, 2025, it was confirmed that some of those files contained protected health information, including names, addresses, birth dates, Social Security numbers, driver’s license numbers, financial account information, medical treatment information, medical record numbers, and...



