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IT and software provider to the NHS could face £6m fine over data breach

The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) has announced today (Wednesday 7 August 2024) that it has provisionally decided to fine Advanced Computer Software Group Ltd (Advanced) £6.09 m following an initial finding that the provider failed to implement measures to protect the personal information of 82,946 people, including some sensitive personal information, in an NHS ransomware incident in August 2022

Advanced provides IT and software services to organisations on a national scale, including to the NHS and other healthcare providers, handling people’s personal information on behalf of these organisations as their data processor. The ICO explains that the provisional decision to issue a fine relates to a ransomware incident in August 2022, where it has provisionally found that hackers initially accessed a number of Advanced’s health and care systems via a customer account that did not have multi-factor authentication. 

The  Information Commissioner has  provisionally found that personal information belonging to 82,946 people was exfiltrated following the attack. The cyberattack was widely reported, with reports of disruption to critical services such as NHS 111, and other healthcare staff unable to access patient records. The data exfiltrated included phone numbers and medical records, and details of how to gain entry to the homes of 890 people who were receiving care at home. People impacted have been notified, and Advanced found no evidence that any data was published on ‘the dark web’. 

The Commissioner’s findings are provisional, as the ICO explains: “ No conclusion should be drawn at this stage that there has, in fact, been any breach of data protection law, or that a financial penalty will ultimately be imposed. The Commissioner will carefully consider any representations Advanced makes before making a final decision, with the fine amount also subject to change.”

UK Information Commissioner, John Edwards (pictured), said: “This incident shows just how important it is to prioritise information security. Losing control of sensitive personal information will have been distressing for people who had no choice but to put their trust in health and care organisations. Not only was personal information compromised, but we have also seen reports that this incident caused disruption to some health services, including to their ability to deliver patient care. A sector already under pressure was put under further strain due to this incident.

“For an organisation trusted to handle a significant volume of sensitive and special category data, we have provisionally found serious failings in its approach to information security prior to this incident. Despite already installing measures on its corporate systems, our provisional finding is that Advanced failed to keep its healthcare systems secure. We expect all organisations to take fundamental steps to secure their systems, such as regularly checking for vulnerabilities, implementing multi-factor authentication, and keeping systems up to date with the latest security patches

“I am choosing to publicise this provisional decision today as it is my duty to ensure other organisations have information that can help them to secure their systems and avoid similar incidents in the future. I urge all organisations, especially those handling sensitive health data, to urgently secure external connections with multi-factor authentication.” 

The ICO has detailed guidance to support organisations to protect their systems from ransomware attacks, as well as guidance on the responsibilities and liabilities of both data processors and controllers. 

 

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