
Pittman, Dutton, Hellums, Bradley & Mann, P.C. is investigating two recently disclosed healthcare data breaches involving Amicus Solutions, Inc. and Huntsville Hospital Health System.
Both incidents may have exposed highly sensitive personal and medical information. Individuals who received a notification letter related to either breach may have legal rights and could be entitled to compensation.
Amicus Solutions, Inc., which does business as Fedora Solutions, recently announced a cybersecurity incident involving personal and protected health information.
Amicus Solutions provides managed information technology and revenue cycle management services to healthcare organizations. The incident reportedly affected patients associated with medical practices managed by OneOncology, LLC, including New York Cancer and Blood Specialists.
According to publicly available information, Amicus Solutions discovered suspicious activity within its computer network on April 2, 2026. An investigation later determined that an unauthorized party may have accessed the company’s systems between February 2 and February 18, 2026.
The unauthorized party allegedly removed files from the network and later posted some of the stolen information on a website controlled by the threat actor. Amicus Solutions reported that the incident affected approximately 1,137 individuals.
The information involved may vary by individual but reportedly included:
Amicus Solutions stated that the incident was limited to its own network and that the unauthorized party did not gain access to its clients’ computer systems.
At the time notification letters were issued, the company said it had not identified evidence that the exposed information had been misused. However, information such as Social Security numbers, medical records, and health insurance details can remain valuable to criminals for years.
Amicus Solutions has reportedly implemented additional security measures and offered affected individuals 24 months of complimentary credit monitoring and identity theft protection services.
Huntsville Hospital Health System has also announced that certain patient information was involved in a separate cybersecurity incident affecting Cerner, now part of Oracle Health.
Cerner provides electronic health record services to hospitals and healthcare organizations throughout the country. According to Huntsville Hospital, the breach occurred within legacy systems maintained by Cerner and did not involve unauthorized access to systems maintained by Huntsville Hospital Health System.
On August 12, 2025, Cerner notified Huntsville Hospital and other healthcare clients that an unauthorized party had gained access to information stored within Cerner’s electronic health record systems.
Cerner’s investigation reportedly determined that the unauthorized access began as early as January 22, 2025. Huntsville Hospital stated that law enforcement directed Cerner to delay notifying patients and additional healthcare providers because earlier notification could have interfered with the investigation.
The information potentially involved in the Cerner incident may have included:
Huntsville Hospital has not publicly confirmed the total number of patients affected by the incident.
Cerner is offering eligible individuals 24 months of complimentary Experian credit monitoring. Affected individuals are also being offered identity restoration services for 24 months.
Individuals who received a notification letter from Amicus Solutions, Fedora Solutions, Huntsville Hospital, Cerner, or Oracle Health should take the incident seriously.
Steps that may help protect your identity include reviewing your credit reports, monitoring bank and insurance statements, changing compromised passwords, placing a fraud alert on your credit file, and considering a credit freeze.
It is also important to keep your notification letter and document any time or money spent responding to the breach. These records may be relevant if you experience identity theft, fraudulent accounts, insurance fraud, tax fraud, or other misuse of your information.
Companies and healthcare vendors that collect sensitive information have a responsibility to implement reasonable safeguards to protect it. When inadequate security exposes patients to identity theft, fraud, and loss of privacy, affected individuals may have legal options.
Pittman, Dutton, Hellums, Bradley & Mann, P.C. represents individuals affected by data breaches throughout the United States. Our attorneys are investigating the Amicus Solutions and Huntsville Hospital incidents and evaluating potential claims on behalf of affected individuals.
If you received a data breach notification involving Amicus Solutions, Fedora Solutions, Huntsville Hospital, Cerner, or Oracle Health, call (205) 322-8880 for a free consultation.
There are no upfront costs, and you pay nothing unless we recover compensation on your behalf.




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