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Kettering Health Cyberattack: MyChart services starting to return

Kettering Health Cyberattack: MyChart services starting to return

Yahoo09-06-2025

Kettering Health has announced that access to its MyChart system is returning nearly three weeks after a cyberattack that caused a system-wide outage.
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The network posted the update under the 'frequently asked questions' portion of their website on Monday.
>>RELATED: Kettering Health officials acknowledge impacts of cyber attack are 'extremely frustrating'
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Kettering Health said MyChart is now available with most of it's functions for patients.
According to an update from the network, patients are now able to view upcoming appointments, schedule appointments, view prescription lists, message their providers and view test results.
>>PREVIOUS COVERAGE: Kettering Health cyberattack; Hacker group claims responsibility, sensitive info put on dark web
Clinical teams are still working to restore patient data in Epic, which is its electronic medical record system.
During this time, patients may get text messages or emails notifying them that updates have been made to their health records.
The health network said these updates are 'legitimate and safe to click through.'
However, Kettering Health officials encourage it's patients to stay alert while reviewing any digital communications.
News Center 7 will continue to follow this story.
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Is Health Care a Right? Trinity Health CEO weighs in

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Remains of nearly 800 babies, kids may be recovered, identified during excavation in Ireland
Remains of nearly 800 babies, kids may be recovered, identified during excavation in Ireland

American Military News

time2 days ago

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Remains of nearly 800 babies, kids may be recovered, identified during excavation in Ireland

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Abridge Announces Inside for Inpatient and Initial Rollout of Outpatient Orders
Abridge Announces Inside for Inpatient and Initial Rollout of Outpatient Orders

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Abridge Announces Inside for Inpatient and Initial Rollout of Outpatient Orders

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As part of this initial rollout with select design partners this functionality, for example, allows medications mentioned during patient encounters directly inside Epic, enabling clinicians to rapidly place orders based on the conversation—saving time, reducing cognitive burden, and minimizing duplicate work. 'Once I finish the visit, the medications I talked through are already surfaced in Epic—and that's a huge help in a busy clinic,' said Dr. Mary Kirby, a family medicine physician at Coastal Carolina. The need is urgent: Nearly three-quarters of outpatient visits result in at least one prescription order, according to the National Center for Health Statistics. Capturing these orders accurately and efficiently has traditionally added to clinicians' documentation burden. Upcoming support for imaging, labs, and additional order types will help clinicians close the loop on more types of follow-up care discussed during the patient conversation. 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