

Apparently all of EPIC was down for the whole country.
Health plan cyber threat intelligence chiming in—I couldn’t verify this claim. Epic’s EHR was unaffected unless the provider/hospital’s connection was handled by an affected Stryker “network bridge” (quotes because I’m not totally certain of the architecture here).
EDIT: But this was the first I heard of Epic being impacted, which is valuable intel. Thank you, and hope you feel better!
EDIT 2: Best I can tell, Stryker’s relationship to Epic is that it’s a data source for a few things that may be relayed to Epic, not any kind of network backbone. Stryker supports a lot of surgical equipment, so maybe that’s why folks like you getting a procedure are being paper charted.


It’s my job to know what’s going on and even I don’t know!
Seems wild that they’re validating parking like that. Either the hospital is crazy overreliant on Stryker systems, or their IT department has a stupidly restrictive “ransomware event” playbook that they’re following to their own peril.