Reported U.S. health-data breach
Were you affected by the Regional Eye Associates, Inc. & Surgical Eye Center of Morgantown data breach?
Regional Eye Associates, Inc. & Surgical Eye Center of Morgantown reported a breach (hacking/it incident) affecting 194,035 people. If you were a patient or member, your information may have been involved. This is not confirmed for you.
- Reported
- 2022
- People affected
- 194,035
- Organization
- Healthcare Provider
- How
- Hacking/IT Incident
- Where
- Network Server
- State
- WV
Appearing here does not mean your data was exposed. Check whether your own email appears in known breaches: it never leaves this page.
These 6 characters are all that leave this page.
Everything else stays on your device. Cellar's own server never sees it.
Breach data from Have I Been Pwned, used under CC BY 4.0. Awareness data from the HHS Office for Civil Rights breach portal.
About the Regional Eye Associates, Inc. & Surgical Eye Center of Morgantown breach
Was I affected by the Regional Eye Associates, Inc. & Surgical Eye Center of Morgantown breach?
Regional Eye Associates, Inc. & Surgical Eye Center of Morgantown reported this breach to the U.S. government, but only the organization knows exactly who was included, so it cannot be confirmed for you here. If you were a patient or member, your information may have been involved. To check whether your email appears in known breaches, run the free check below; your email never leaves your device.
What happened in the Regional Eye Associates, Inc. & Surgical Eye Center of Morgantown breach?
Regional Eye Associates, Inc. & Surgical Eye Center of Morgantown reported a breach (hacking/it incident) affecting 194,035 people. If you were a patient or member, your information may have been involved. This is not confirmed for you.
How many people did the Regional Eye Associates, Inc. & Surgical Eye Center of Morgantown breach affect?
194,035 individuals, according to the report Regional Eye Associates, Inc. & Surgical Eye Center of Morgantown filed with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services in 2022.
What should I do if I was affected?
Change any reused passwords and turn on two-factor authentication, be wary of phishing that references real details about you, and keep your own copy of your medical records so you stay in control of them going forward.
