In the Comparitech study released Feb. 11, researchers analyzed data from IT news channels, data breach reports and HHS Office for Civil Rights data breach portal. Then, Comparitech applied data from studies on the cost of downtime to estimate a range for the likely cost of ransomware attacks.
Here is a state-by-state breakdown of the number of patient records affected by ransomware attacks:
- Alabama: 402,322
- Alaska: 44,600
- Arizona: 11,828
- Arkansas: 128,000
- California: 753,109
- Colorado: 37,297
- Connecticut: 48,726
- Delaware: 96,076
- Florida: 43,469
- Georgia: 193,995
- Hawaii: 40,800
- Illinois: 27,839
- Indiana: 161,400
- Iowa: 51,617
- Kansas: 86,087
- Kentucky: 45,062
- Louisiana: 136,943
- Maryland: 31,120
- Massachusetts: 223,123
- Michigan: 1,098,263
- Minnesota: 117,876
- Mississippi: 58,000
- Missouri: 305,596
- Nebraska: 58,341
- Nevada: 3,898
- New Hampshire : 2,081
- New Jersey: 84,327
- New York: 66,312
- North Carolina: 925
- Ohio: 32,660
- Oklahoma: 6,000
- Oregon: 2,000
- Pennsylvania: 343,000
- Puerto Rico: 522,439
- Rhode Island: 15,478
- South Dakota: 10,200
- Tennessee: 23,500
- Texas: 483,300
- Utah: 320,000
- Virginia: 13,237
- Washington: 497,502
- Wisconsin: 21,365
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