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SickKids impacted by BORN Ontario data breach that hit 3.4 million. The Hospital for Sick Children, more commonly known as SickKids, is among healthcare providers that were impacted by the recent breach at BORN Ontario. The top Canadian pediatric hospital disclosed that as a part of its operations, it shares personal health information with BORN Ontario "related to pregnancy, birth and newborn care." The BORN Ontario data breach that impacted 3.4 million people was caused by the exploitation of well-known zero-day vulnerability (CVE-2023-34362) in Progress MOVEIt Transfer software. SickKids also hit by BORN Ontario breach On Monday, September 25th, SickKids disclosed that it is "among the many Ontario healthcare providers" that share sensitive health information with BORN Ontario, a perinatal and child registry that collects, interprets, shares and protects critical data about pregnancy, birth and childhood in the province of Ontario. Since BORN Ontario was a victim of a security incident that affected 3.4 million people, as BleepingComputer reported yesterday, SickKids warns that its patients and associates may also have been affected. "We are among the many Ontario healthcare providers that share personal health information with BORN Ontario related to pregnancy, birth and newborn care – important healthcare encounters that can affect lifelong health," states SickKids in its disclosure. "BORN collects data from healthcare providers pursuant to the authority afforded to it in the Personal Health Information Protection Act (PHIPA). BORN Ontario uses this information to identify immediate care gaps affecting individuals, link information to appropriate care providers, perform health system quality assurance, and analyze data for emerging trends." Exposed data of those impacted by the BORN Ontario data breach included, at a minimum: Depending on the type of care received by BORN, the exposed data may also have included: BORN has created a web page with details about the impact the incident has on its patients and who is likely affected by the data theft. Without revealing additional details about how many SickKids patients and associates were affected, the hospital also directed parties to visit BORN's aforementioned webpage, to find out if they have been impacted. It is worth noting, SickKids may not be the only hospital to be affected by the BORN Ontario security incident, and similar such disclosures may be forthcoming from other healthcare providers in the upcoming weeks. December last year, SickKids was hit by the LockBit ransomware group, who later apologized—blaming the erroneous act of targeting a medical facility on an affiliate, and offered the hospital a "free decryptor."

Daily Brief Summary

DATA BREACH // BORN Ontario Data Breach Affects SickKids Hospital and 3.4 Million Patients

The BORN Ontario data breach impacted 3.4 million people and has had significant effects on The Hospital for Sick Children, known as SickKids.

The breach occurred due to the exploitation of a zero-day vulnerability in Progress MOVEIt Transfer software.

SickKids, along with many other Ontario healthcare providers, shares sensitive health information with BORN Ontario, a perinatal and child registry that collects and protects data relating to pregnancies and births.

BORN Ontario uses this data to identify care gaps affecting individuals, connect information to suitable care providers, conduct health system quality assurance, and analyse data for emerging trends.

The breach exposed a minimum of personal health information related to pregnancy, birth and newborn care, and depending on the type of care received, other data might also be exposed.

It is currently unclear how many SickKids patients and associates were affected, and the hospital refers those interested to BORN Ontario's webpage for further details.

This is the second major digital security blow SickKids has suffered in recent times, as it was targeted by the LockBit ransomware group in December last year.