The company also said Thursday that it expects to begin notifying individuals or patients in late July.
The attack triggered a disruption of payment and claims processing around the country, stressing doctor’s offices and health care systems by interfering with their ability to file claims and get paid.
Change says names, addresses, health insurance information and personal information like
It said Thursday that it has reviewed more than 90% of impacted files and has seen no signs that doctors’ charts or full medical histories were taken.
After the attack,
Witty said during Congressional hearings last month that all of the company’s core systems, including claims payment and pharmacy processing, were functional.
The company has been offering to pay for two years of credit monitoring and identity theft protection for people worried that their information may have been exposed in the attack.
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