The AHA has been made aware of a validated IT help desk social engineering scheme that uses the stolen identity of revenue cycle employees or employees in other sensitive financial roles. The scheme involves what is presumably a foreign-based threat actor calling IT help desks and leveraging stolen personally identifiable information of employees to answer security questions posed by the IT help desk. The threat actor then requests a password reset and requests to enroll a new device, such as a cell phone, to receive multi-factor authentication codes. This new device will often have a local area code. This effectively defeats multi-factor authentication, including SMS text and higher level “phishing-resistant” MFA, to provide full access to the compromised employee’s email account and other applications. The threat actor has reportedly used the compromised employee’s email account to change payment instructions with payment processors and divert legitimate payments to fraudulent U.S. bank accounts. As with other payment diversion schemes, it is believed the funds are ultimately transferred overseas.

“The risk posed by this innovative and sophisticated scheme can be mitigated by ensuring strict IT help desk security protocols, which at a minimum require a call back to the number on record for the employee requesting password resets and enrollment of new devices,” said John Riggi, AHA’s national advisor for cybersecurity and risk. “Organizations may also want to contact the supervisor on record of the employee making such a request. As a result of becoming a victim of this scheme, one large health system now requires employees making such requests to appear in person at the IT help desk. This scheme once again demonstrates how our cyber adversaries are quickly evolving their tactics to defeat technological cyber defenses through social engineering schemes. It is also recommended that organizations that fall victim to any type of payment diversion scheme immediately notify their financial institution and the FBI at www.ic3.gov, which has proven to help recover the diverted payments if notification is made within 72 hours of the payment diversion.”

For more information on this or cyber and risk matters contact Riggi at jriggi@aha.org. For the latest cyber and risk threat information and resources visit www.aha.org/cybersecurity

Related News Articles

Headline
The Department of Health and Human Services Health Sector Cybersecurity Coordination Center June 27 issued an alert about a critical vulnerability in MOVEit, a…
Headline
A joint report released June 26 by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, FBI, the Australian Cyber Security Centre and Canadian Centre for…
Headline
The Health Information Sharing and Analysis Center June 27 issued a threat bulletin alerting the health sector to active cyberthreats exploiting TeamViewer. H-…
Headline
The FBI and Department of Health and Human Services June 24 released an advisory about cyberthreat actors targeting health care organizations in attempts to…
Headline
The Department of Health and Human Services’ Health Sector Cybersecurity Coordination Center (HC3) this week released an advisory about Qilin, formerly "Agenda…
Headline
Change Healthcare June 20 began notifying health care providers and other customers with patient data stolen following February’s cyberattack, the company…