In May 2021, a Conti ransomware attack crippled Ireland’s Health Service Executive (HSE). And unfortunately, the country’s public hospital system is still feeling the effects.
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The costs of cyberattacks—shut down services, angry patients, and extraordinary monetary costs—are detrimental to healthcare industries worldwide. For healthcare covered entities, keeping protected health information (PHI) safe is a crucial part of patient care.
For those in the U.S. under the HIPAA Act, strong cybersecurity measures, such as HIPAA compliant email, are essential.
Conti ransomware is a known ransomware-as-a-service that exploits weaknesses in Microsoft products. A U.S. joint advisory notes that the threat actors probably pay users a wage rather than a percentage of the proceeds.
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Cyberattackers have long since gone after the healthcare industry as a lucrative target. Especially for groups, like Conti, that encrypt sensitive information then hold it for ransom. Based in Russia, Conti’s developers regularly attack healthcare. Recently, the Conti group even announced that it would support Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
SEE ALSO: AHA warns Russia’s invasion of Ukraine could lead to U.S. healthcare cyberattacks
The Conti developers claimed responsibility for at least 16 cyberattacks within the U.S. Its cyberattacks internationally have risen to more than 1,000.
In 2021, HSE discovered a large-scale ransomware attack that shut down its healthcare IT systems nationwide. The cybercriminals (Russian-based Wizard Spider) used Conti ransomware within a malicious Microsoft Excel file attached to a phishing email.
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The attack led to several immediate problems for HSE’s hospitals:
The hackers provided a decryption tool for free but threatened to publish the information publicly if they didn’t receive the $20 million bitcoin ransom. HSE refused to pay and the threat group exposed PHI, including COVID-19 vaccination information. Recovery from the above problems took months but does not represent the end of HSE’s issues.
According to ransomware experts, ransomware recovery is a lengthy, complex process with huge expenses from lost time to lost opportunities. To add to this are exorbitant monetary costs:
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For example, Scripps Health took weeks to get its system back online and suffered $112.7 million in lost revenue. At the moment, HSE’s costs have reached €43 million for IT changes, cyber/strategic partner support, and vendor support. HSE forecasts that expenses could reach as high as €100 million but of course, there are also the costs to patient care.
Lawsuits from patients are pending. While the costs of Ireland’s cyberattack seem high, the numbers show that HSE is serious about improving its cybersecurity.
We recently summarized a Health Sector Cybersecurity Coordinate Center (HC3) brief urging U.S. healthcare organizations to learn from Ireland’s cyberattack. According to HC3, the problems boil down to missing leadership and up-to-date plans that focus on before, during, and after an attack.
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HC3 further stated that HSE over-relied on its antivirus software, which is why it added helpful cybersecurity safeguards:
And of course, strong email security to block phishing emails from ever making it into an inbox.
Paubox Email Suite Plus provides needed email security and strong HIPAA compliant email. Our HITRUST CSF certified solution encrypts all outbound email, which can be sent directly from an existing email platform (e.g., Microsoft 365 or Google Workspace). No extra passwords, portals, or logins are necessary.
SEE ALSO: How to get employees to use encrypted email
And it blocks incoming phishing messages and other email threats from even reaching an inbox. Our Zero Trust Email feature requires an additional piece of evidence and keeps malware from being delivered.
The costs of a cyberattack, especially a ransomware attack, can add up and be astronomical. It's best to avoid having to deal with this by utilizing solid cybersecurity measures before a threat group causes complications.