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Cardiac monitoring firm iRhythm says patient health data stolen in attack

iRhythm, the US digital-health company behind the Zio wearable heart monitor, has told regulators that attackers stole patient data in a breach it considers material. In an SEC filing, the company said it detected unauthorized activity on June 8 in third-party-hosted business applications, accessed through a social-engineering attack, and received an extortion demand the next day from a threat actor claiming to hold proprietary data, protected health information, and other personal data. iRhythm says its clinical systems, medical devices, patient safety, and operations were not affected, with no payment-card or financial data involved. No ransomware group has publicly claimed the attack, and the number of affected people is not yet known.

Check
Healthcare and other organizations should review how third-party-hosted business applications are secured and monitored, and confirm that help desks and staff can resist social-engineering attempts to grant access.
Affected
iRhythm patients and others whose protected health information and personal data sat in the affected third-party business applications; clinical systems, devices, and financial data were reportedly not involved.
Fix
Enforce phishing-resistant MFA and strong identity verification on third-party SaaS, limit and log access to systems holding health data, and rehearse social-engineering scenarios with staff and help-desk teams.