CBS News
Latest hospital cyberattack shows how health care systems’ vulnerability can put patients at risk
Tulsa, Oklahoma — Annie Wolf’s open-heart surgery was just two days away when the Hillcrest Medical Center in Tulsa, Oklahoma, called, informing her that her procedure had been postponed after a major ransomware attack.
“I’ve got a hole in my mitral valve, and basically walking around, I can’t breathe,” Wolf told CBS News. “And I get very fatigued, very tired, very quickly. If I go to the store, I’ve got to ride the scooter.”
Wolf is just one of the patients impacted after Ardent Health Services says it became aware of the cyber breach on Thanksgiving day affecting 30 hospitals and more than 200 health care sites across six states.
J.D. Bloomer has had an annual cancer check since he was diagnosed in 2008. However, the cyberattack turned his routine visit at the University of Kansas Healthcare System St. Francis campus in Topeka into a scheduling headache.
“They informed me that my procedure for tomorrow had been canceled,” Bloomer told CBS News. “…I said, ‘OK, when will be rescheduling?’ And she said, ‘When the network returns.'”
In a statement, Ardent said it immediately began safeguarding confidential patient data, and protectively took its computer network offline, which required some facilities, including two in New Jersey, to divert ambulances to nearby medical centers.
Ardent said that “in an abundance of caution, our facilities are rescheduling some non-emergent, elective procedures and diverting some emergency room patients to other area hospitals.”
Ardent has not announced a timeline for when the issue could be resolved.
According to the Institute for Security and Technology, at least 299 hospitals have suffered ransomware attacks in 2023.
“Well, I think, there’s always the concern of loss of life,” Kiersten Todt, former chief of staff at the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, said about the impact on the 911 infrastructure when a hospital system is crippled by a cyberattack.
Dr. Christian Demef, co-director of the UC San Diego Center for Healthcare Security, is a hacker turned emergency room physician who saw firsthand how a ransomware attack impacted his San Diego hospital after a 2021 hack crippled a nearby facility.
“We saw three times the number of ambulances one day than we ever had before because of a ransomware attack in our community,” Demef said.
“Life-threatening time-sensitive medical conditions like stroke, trauma, heart attacks, all of these minutes truly matter,” he added. “And when these systems are down, we can’t do our job effectively.”
“Malicious actors want to make money off of it,” Todt said.
“It absolutely is” motivated by profit, according to Todt. “It’s an economic model. The tragedy is that it’s an economic model that…happens to capitalize on an infrastructure that is responsible for human lives.”
CBS News
Teacher, student killed in Wisconsin school shooting identified
A teacher and student killed in a shooting earlier this week at a school in Madison, Wisconsin, were identified Wednesday by authorities.
The Dane County Medical Examiner’s Office said in a news release provided to CBS News that 42-year-old Erin West and 14-year-old Rubi Vergara were fatally shot Monday morning at Abundant Life Christian School.
Preliminary examinations determined the two died of “homicidal firearm related trauma.” Both were pronounced dead at the scene, the medical examiner said.
An online obituary on a local funeral site stated Vergara was a freshman who leaves behind her parents, one brother, and a large extended family. It described her as “an avid reader” who “loved art, singing and playing keyboard in the family worship band.”
West’s exact position with the school was unclear.
The medical examiner also confirmed that a preliminary autopsy found that the suspected shooter, 15-year-old Natalie Rupnow — a student at the same school — was pronounced dead at a local hospital Monday of “firearm related trauma.” Madison Chief of Police Shon F. Barnes had previously told reporters that Rupnow was pronounced dead while being transported to a hospital.
Police had also previously stated that she was believed to have died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
The shooting at the private Christian K-12 school was reported just before 11 a.m. Monday. In addition to the two people killed and the shooter, six others were wounded.
Police said the shooting occurred in a classroom where a study hall was taking place involving students from several grades.
A handgun was recovered after the shooting, Barnes said, but it was unclear where the gun came from or how many shots were fired. A law enforcement source said the weapon used in the shooting appears to have been a 9 mm pistol.
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Last-minute government funding bill in limbo after opposition from Trump, others
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“CBS Evening News” headlines for Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2024
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