The
origin of the computer network intrusion was unknown but since
it began late last week has bogged down communications between
physicians and medical staff newly dependent on paper records
and doctors' notoriously messy handwriting, doctors and a
Federal Bureau of Investigation spokeswoman said on Tuesday.
"It's right there on paper, but it may not be legible," Dr.
Rangasamy Ramanathan, a neonatal-perinatal specialist affiliated
with the 434-bed facility, said. "The only problem is doctors'
writing."
Although the cyber attack has snarled the hospital's patient
database, doctors have managed to relay necessary medical
records the old-fashioned way through phone lines and fax
machines, Ramanathan said.
The FBI is seeking to pinpoint hackers responsible for the
intrusion, FBI spokeswoman Ari Dekofsky said. She declined to
release further details.
Allen Stefanek, the hospital's president and CEO, told Los
Angeles television station KNBC-TV the hospital declared an
internal emergency on Friday, after encountering significant
information technology problems due to the hack.
A spokeswoman for the hospital could not be reached for comment.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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