MCG Health, LLC, a healthcare technology company that provides services to a long list of healthcare systems including healthcare plans and hospitals, recently suffered a data breach wherein an unauthorized party obtained the personal identifying information (PII) of more than 1 million patients across the country. The personal data affected by the breach included information such as social security numbers, medical codes, postal addresses, telephone numbers, email addresses, dates of birth and gender.
MCG first learned of the breach on March 25, 2022 but didn’t inform companies and individuals with this notice until June 10, 2022 that their information was compromised.
The following organizations are already known to be impacted by the breach, but others may be affected:
• Indiana University Health
• Jefferson County Health Center
• CHI Health in Omaha
• Avera Health
• Lenoir Health Care
• Henry County Medical Center
• Newman Regional Medical Center
• Phelps Health Medical Group
• Copley Hospital
• Catholic Health Initiatives
• Saint Mary’s Health Network
• McLaren Port Huron
• PFC USA
• Sweetwater Hospital Association
• Lafayette Surgical Specialty Hospital
This list is not comprehensive and there may be other organization that were affected.
Consumers deserve to know that their information is being protected. If you have been notified that your data was compromised, please contact our data privacy attorneys at (800) 776-6044, dataprivacy@kellerrohrback.com, or by using the secure form on this page to learn more about your legal rights.
About Keller Rohrback L.L.P.
With offices in Seattle, Phoenix, Portland, Missoula, New York, Oakland and Santa Barbara, Keller Rohrback serves as lead and co-lead counsel in class actions throughout the country, including in the Facebook Consumer Privacy litigation. Our data privacy team is a pioneer in representing consumers, employees, and companies who have had their information breached, and we have a long track-record of success in this area, including the Ninth Circuit case Krottner v. Starbucks, which established that the theft of a laptop containing employees’ personally identifiable information sufficed to confer Article III standing on plaintiffs.
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