Data breaches have been announced by the EHR provider Modernizing Medicine (ModMed), the Baltimore healthcare provider LifeBridge Health, and the home health care provider Right at Home.
Modernizing Medicine
Modernizing Medicine (ModMed), a provider of specialty-specific electronic health record software, has recently notified state attorneys general about a July 2025 security incident involving theft of data from its systems. Suspicious activity was identified on its computer servers on July 21, 2025. An investigation was launched to determine the cause of the activity, and on July 29, 2025, it was unauthorized access to its servers was confirmed between July 9, 2025, and July 10, 2025, during which time, files containing sensitive data were copied from the servers.
The files were reviewed and found to contain personal and protected health information such as full names, dates of birth, addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, Social Security numbers, medical record numbers, patient account numbers, provider and practice names, billing and diagnostic codes, prescriptions/medications, diagnosis and treatment information, bank/financial account information, driver’s license numbers/government ID cards, and health insurance information. ModMed said full medical records were not involved, and the types of information compromised vary from individual to individual.
The affected healthcare providers were notified on September 19, 2025, and notification letters started to be mailed to the affected individuals on October 17, 2025. ModMed is offering complimentary credit monitoring and identity theft protection services to individuals whose Social Security numbers were compromised in the incident, and steps have been taken to improve security to prevent similar incidents in the future. Due to the government shutdown, the HHS’ Office for Civil Rights breach portal has not been updated in a month, so it is currently unclear how many individuals have been affected.
LifeBridge Health
LifeBridge Health, a non-profit healthcare corporation serving patients in and around Baltimore, Maryland, has recently informed patients that some of their protected health information was compromised in a data breach earlier this year. The breach involved one of its vendors, Oracle Health (formerly Cerner). LifeBridge Health was one of many healthcare providers to be affected. Hackers gained access to a legacy system as early as January 22, 2025, and obtained patient information such as names, medical record numbers, Social Security numbers, physician names, diagnoses, test results, medications, medical images, and treatment information. LifeBridge Health said the breach was confined to Oracle Health servers, and its own systems were unaffected.
Oracle Health notified LifeBridge Health about the data breach in March 2025, with notifications reportedly delayed at the request of law enforcement. Oracle Health provided LifeBridge Health with a final list of the affected individuals on September 19, 2025. The data breach was announced by LifeBridge Health on October 16, when notification letters started to be mailed to the affected individuals. Two years of complimentary credit monitoring and identity theft protection services have been offered to the affected individuals. It is currently unclear how many individuals have been affected.
Right at Home
Ever Care Corporation, which does business as Right at Home, a provider of in-home care to seniors and adults with disabilities, experienced a hacking incident that likely involved the theft of sensitive patient information. Suspicious network activity was identified on September 3, 2025, and an investigation was launched to determine the cause of the activity. Right at Home confirmed that the activity was due to an unauthorized actor, who is thought to have acquired files from its network on September 3, 2025. The review of the affected files was completed on October 6, 2025. There is currently no substitute data breach notice on the Right at Home website, and the types of information involved are not shown on the notifications published on attorneys’ general websites. The exact types of information involved are detailed in the individual notification letters. Right at Home is paying for single-bureau credit monitoring, credit score, and credit report services for the affected individuals. It is currently unclear how many individuals have been affected.
While not described by Right at Home as a ransomware attack, a ransomware group claimed responsibility for the attack. The Sinobi ransomware group, which has attacked several healthcare providers in recent months, claimed to have exfiltrated around 50 GB of data and encrypted files. Right at Home was listed on its data leak site on October 8, 2025. As such, any individual receiving a notification letter should sign up for the credit services being offered.
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