Healthcare
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Incident & Breach Response
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Industry Specific
Catholic Healthcare Organization Took IT Systems Offline in Response to Incident

Covenant Health, a network of Catholic healthcare organizations serving New England and parts of Pennsylvania, is dealing with a cyber incident affecting services at several facilities where healthcare is still mostly being delivered normally.
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A Covenant Health spokeswoman in a Thursday statement said the health system has been responding to the incident since its discovery earlier this week.
It became “aware” on May 26 of “irregularities impacting connectivity across the organization,” the spokeswoman said. “Out of an abundance of caution, we immediately discontinued access to all data systems in our hospitals, clinics and provider practices.”
Covenant Health is working to provide healthcare services as normal, she said. “Patients are encouraged to keep all appointments. If patients have questions, they should contact their provider’s office.”
The situation has affected two hospitals in Maine, one hospital in New Hampshire, as well as associated provider practices, she said. “It has had very limited impact to our post-acute care facilities as they are on different clinical platforms.”
On Thursday, Covenant Health had alerts posted on several of its facilities’ websites, including St. Mary Hospital in Maine and St. Joseph Hospital in New Hampshire.
“St. Joseph’s is currently experiencing a temporary system issue that may affect phones and internet access. Some services may be intermittently unavailable. If you are experiencing a medical emergency, please dial 911,” one of the hospital’s advisories said. “We recognize this may impact your experience. Our team is working around the clock to resolve the issue and restore full services as quickly as possible.”
A second notice popping up on St. Joseph’s website alerted the public that its outpatient laboratory services were also affected. “Due to a temporary system issue, we are adjusting our outpatient lab services. For the time being, labs will only be available at our main hospital campus, and services can be provided only with a physical order in hand,” the notice said. “We understand the impact this may have on your care, and we sincerely apologize for the disruption.”
Covenant Health on its website said its regional healthcare delivery network includes several hospitals, skilled nursing and rehabilitation centers, assisted living residences and community-based health and elder care organizations serving five out of New England’s six states – plus a retirement community with healthcare services located near Scranton, Pennsylvania.
The Covenant incident is among a few other recent cyberattacks on health systems disrupting patient services.
Ohio-based Kettering Health on Wednesday said it finally ended emergency department diversions, and on Thursday resumed walk-in healthcare services for patients, as it brings its IT systems back online following a cyberattack discovered on May 20 (see: Ohio Health System Responding to Cyberattack, Fraud Scams).