Hospitals and large healthcare organizations have increasingly become prime targets for cybercriminals. In response, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has established a new initiative within the National Institutes of Health (NIH) aimed at enhancing cybersecurity measures for hospitals.

This initiative, called “Universal Patching and Remediation for Autonomous Defense” (UPGRADE), was launched on May 20. UPGRADE’s mission is to develop a tailored and scalable suite of software tools that will enable hospital IT teams to effectively combat ransomware attacks and reduce the time needed to patch vulnerable healthcare products from months to just days or weeks.Continue Reading HHS Pledges $50 million to Empower Hospitals in the Battle Against Cyberattacks

On March 9, 2024, in response to the cyberattack on UnitedHealth Group’s subsidiary, Change Healthcare/Optum, in late February 2024, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (“CMS”) made available Change Healthcare/Optum Payment Disruption (“CHOPD”) accelerated payments to Medicare Part A providers and advance payments to Medicare Part B suppliers experiencing claims disruptions as a result of the cyberattack.

CMS, through the Medicare Administrative Contractors (“MACs”), may grant CHOPD accelerated and advance payments in amounts representative of up to thirty days’ worth of Part A or Part B claims to eligible Medicare providers and suppliers, which is calculated by taking the total claims paid to the provider/supplier between August 1, 2023 through October 31, 2023 and dividing that number by three.

In this post, we will detail eligibility requirements and terms of the payments. We note that these are not loans or grants. They are advanced and accelerated payments and CMS will immediately begin to recoup the payments. For more details, CMS has issued a Fact Sheet and Frequently Asked Questions.Continue Reading CMS Offers Change Healthcare/Optum Payment Disruption Payments to Medicare Providers and Suppliers