Stacey Scott reports: Massachusetts health officials are warning over 134,000 individuals who are currently or were previously enrolled in certain state programs that their personal information has been involved in a recent third-party data security breach. The breach is part of a worldwide incident that involves a file-transfer software program called “MOVEit.” UMass Chan Medical School first became aware of the vulnerability in MOVEit on June 1. On July 27, UMass Chan discovered that some of the files contained information belonging to individuals who received services from the Executive Office of Health and Human Services. This includes programs such as MassHealth, the State Supplement Program, Family Resource Centers, the Executive Office of Elder Affairs, and Aging Services Access Points. The affected individuals are a subset of current or recent participants in these programs. The information compromised in the breach varies by person but may include names, dates of birth, mailing addresses, protected health information (such as diagnosis/treatment information, prescription information, provider names, dates of service, claims information, health insurance member ID numbers, and other health insurance-related information), Social Security numbers, and financial account information. Read more at Gillett News.
Stacey Scott reports: Massachusetts health officials are warning over 134,000 individuals who are currently or were previously enrolled in certain state programs that their personal information has been involved in a recent third-party data security breach. The breach is part of a worldwide incident that involves a file-transfer software program called “MOVEit.” UMass Chan Medical School first became aware of the vulnerability in MOVEit on June 1. On July 27, UMass Chan discovered that some of the files contained information belonging to individuals who received services from the Executive Office of Health and Human Services. This includes programs such as MassHealth, the State Supplement Program, Family Resource Centers, the Executive Office of Elder Affairs, and Aging Services Access Points. The affected individuals are a subset of current or recent participants in these programs. The information compromised in the breach varies by person but may include names, dates of birth, mailing addresses, protected health information (such as diagnosis/treatment information, prescription information, provider names, dates of service, claims information, health insurance member ID numbers, and other health insurance-related information), Social Security numbers, and financial account information. Read more at Gillett News.
https://www.databreaches.net/134k-massachusetts-residents-impacted-by-global-security-incident/