(Reuters) - UnitedHealth Group said on Wednesday it has advanced more than $3.3 billion in loans to care providers impacted by a cyberattack on the U.S. healthcare conglomerate' tech unit last month.
Medical providers say they're still grappling with the fallout from a cyberattack on a subsidiary of UnitedHealth Group, headquartered in Minnetonka, Minnesota. The February breach halted payments to ...
The firm ranks as the nation’s fifth-largest company by revenue, just behind Apple and ahead of tech giants Alphabet and ...
Insurance giant UnitedHealth Group is under investigation by the Department of Health and Human Services over its handling of ...
UnitedHealth Group's first-quarter earnings report could offer a window into the financial impact of the February cyberattack on its Change Healthcare subsidiary. The outage of the billing and ...
, opens new tab is expected to record higher medical costs in its first earnings report since a cyberattack disrupted its technology systems including those that manage prescription and medical ...
UnitedHealth says files with personal information that could cover a “substantial portion of people in America” may have been ...
Witty estimated that the data breach could affect about one-third of all Americans — which would be more than 100 million ...
It’s been more than a month since an unprecedented cyberattack nearly brought down a large portion of American healthcare, severely limiting some patients and providers from completing the most ...
Change Healthcare, a business unit of the Minnesota-based insurance giant UnitedHealth Group, controls a digital network so vast it processes nearly 1 in 3 U.S. patient records each year. The network ...