Cyberattack on Coos County Family Health Services Exposed Patient Data
Data breaches have recently been announced by Coos County Family Health Services in New Hampshire, Roush Fenway Keselowski Racing in North Carolina, and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill/UNC School of Medicine. Coos County Family Health Services Coos County Family Health Services, a primary care provider based in Berlin, New Hampshire, has recently announced a privacy incident that was identified on July 9, 2025, when suspicious activity was observed in its servers and phone systems. An investigation was launched, which confirmed that an unauthorized third party had access to its servers and phone systems on July 9, 2025, and may have copied data from those systems. While ransomware was not mentioned in the notification letters, this appears to have been a ransomware attack. A ransomware group called RunSomeWarez claimed responsibility for the attack and added Coos County Family Health Services to its dark web data leak site. The group claims to have exfiltrated data. A ransom does not appear to have been paid. Coos County Family Health Services reviewed the affected...
OneBlood Will Pay Up to $1M to Settle Class Action Data Breach Lawsuit
OneBlood, a non-profit organization that provides blood to approximately 350 hospitals in the southeastern United States, has agreed to pay up to $1,000,000 to resolve a class action lawsuit over its July 2024 ransomware attack and data breach. Between July 14, 2024, and July 29, 2024, a threat actor had access to OneBlood’s computer systems and exfiltrated sensitive data before using ransomware to encrypt files. The investigation confirmed that protected health information had been exposed, and a total of 167,400 individuals had their names and Social Security numbers exposed or stolen. Three of the affected individuals, Deanna Newberry, Matthew Shuttleworth, and Andy Shuttleworth, took legal action seeking damages for themselves and similarly situated individuals. In the lawsuit, Deanna Newberry, et al. v OneBlood, Inc., the plaintiffs claimed that OneBlood failed to implement reasonable and appropriate security measures to secure their personal information, and that the ransomware attack and data breach could have been prevented if appropriate security measures had been...
Albany Gastroenterology Consultants: November 2024 Data Breach Affects Almost 58,000 Patients
Albany Gastroenterology Consultants and Inlet Care (Communicare) are notifying patients affected by cyberattacks in November 2024 that involved unauthorized access to systems containing patient data. Albany Gastroenterology Consultants Albany Gastroenterology Consultants in New York State has notified the Maine Attorney General about a data breach involving the personal and protected health information of up to 57,751 individuals. Unusual network activity was identified on November 19, 2024, which disrupted access to one of its computer systems. Steps were taken to isolate the system, and an investigation was launched to determine the nature of the activity and whether any patient data had been compromised. The investigation confirmed unauthorized access to its network and that certain personal information was accessed and acquired by the threat actor on November 10, 2024. While notification letters were mailed to some of the affected individuals on September 23, 2025; however, the data breach was first disclosed by Albany Gastroenterology Associates in January 2025. The first...
Medusind to Pay $5 Million to Settle Data Breach Litigation
Medusind has agreed to pay $5,000,000 to settle a consolidated class action lawsuit over a 2023 data breach. Medusind is a revenue cycle management and practice management software vendor based in Florida. On or around December 29, 2023, the firm identified unauthorized access to its computer systems and found evidence to suggest that files had been exfiltrated from its network. The file review confirmed that more than 701,000 individuals had protected health information exposed in the incident, including names, contact information, health insurance information, medical histories, driver’s license numbers, passport numbers, and Social Security numbers. Notification letters were mailed to the affected individuals more than a year after the intrusion was detected. Victims of the breach took legal action against Medusind, claiming negligence for failing to implement reasonable and appropriate safeguards to protect individuals’ personal and protected health information. Eight separate complaints were filed in response to the data breach. Since they had overlapping claims, they...
Michigan Critical Access Hospital Suffers Two Hacking Incidents Affecting Almost 78,000 Individuals
Sturgis Hospital, a rural critical access hospital in Michigan, has recently reported two security incidents to the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights, both of which have potentially affected up to 77,771 individuals. The first incident was identified in December 2024 when unauthorized activity was observed in part of its computer network. Third-party cybersecurity experts were engaged to investigate the incident and determine the nature and scope of the unauthorized activity. Unauthorized access was confirmed, the incident was remediated, and the exposed files were reviewed to determine the individuals affected and the types of data involved. The investigation and file review had not concluded when further unauthorized network activity was detected in June 2025. A separate investigation was launched into the second incident, with assistance provided by third-party experts. Based on the two investigations, Sturgis Hospital concluded that there was potentially unauthorized access to patient and employee information and files containing sensitive patient and employee data may have been...



