Healthcare faces cyberattack every 10 hours – driven by known flaws and high ransom payments

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Healthcare Faces Cyberattack Every 10 Hours – Driven by Known Flaws and High Ransom Payments

Attackers aren’t using new techniques – they’re exploiting known weaknesses, and healthcare is paying

Healthcare organizations are being hit by cyberattacks at an alarming rate – about every 10 hours – and attackers are succeeding using vulnerabilities that are already known and fixable, according to new research from Securin.

Ransom payment rates range from 68% to 72%, making the sector one of the most reliable and profitable targets for cybercriminals.Share

“Ransomware in healthcare has become a repeatable business model,” said Dr. Srinivas Mukkamala, CEO of Securin. “Attackers are walking through doors that were left open – and getting paid for it. Once they’re inside, the disruption is so severe that organizations are often forced into costly decisions – in many cases tied to issues that could have been addressed earlier.”

The problem is getting worse for a simple reason: attackers are succeeding – and once inside, the cost of disruption often forces difficult decisions. Ransom payment rates range from 68% to 72%, making the sector one of the most reliable and profitable targets for cybercriminals.

This isn’t about sophisticated, never-before-seen threats. Every vulnerability exploited in these attacks is already listed in the U.S. government’s Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog.

Attackers are repeatedly exploiting unfixed, well-documented weaknesses, allowing them to scale attacks quickly using proven, repeatable methods.

The report analyzed 592 incidents across 94 ransomware groups between January 2025 and February 2026:

  • 59% of attacks involved ransomware
  • 56% targeted U.S.- based organizations

How attackers are getting in

Securin identified 29 actively exploited vulnerabilities, with a clear pattern:

  • Authentication bypass is the most common entry point
  • VPN and remote access systems account for roughly one-third of initial access
  • Attackers often exploit vulnerabilities long after they are disclosed and patchable

Across incidents, attackers follow the same sequence:

  • Initial access
  • Credential harvesting
  • Lateral movement
  • Data exfiltration
  • Encryption

In many cases, access to healthcare systems is purchased for as little as $2,000 to $50,000, lowering the barrier to entry.

Certain groups – including Qilin, Incransom, and Cl0p – have scaled attacks by exploiting the same vulnerability across multiple organizations.

Why healthcare continues to be targeted

Healthcare remains a top target because the economics favor attackers:

  • 68-72% ransom payment rate (vs. ~40% in other sectors)
  • Medical records sell for $250-$1,000 each
  • Hospitals can lose $1M-$2M per day during disruptions

Faced with these pressures, many organizations make difficult decisions to restore operations quickly – reinforcing the cycle attackers rely on.