
Lost data included names, Social Security numbers, health plan ID numbers and descriptions of medical services rendered since 2003, according to the Times’ report.
Representatives from Magellan and Empire could not be immediately reached for comment today.
Paul Stephens, policy analyst at the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse, told SCMagazine.com that, along with the compromise of sensitive medical information, victims should be concerned about the financial risks such as identity theft.
"The fact that Social Security numbers are involved means there is a financial risk for those individuals because there would be sufficient information for anyone to open up a credit card or bank account or a wireless service account," he said.
"People tend to be very private about health-care issues, and when you bring up health care, there are other issues to think about, like HIPAA(the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act).
"One thing to think about is, was there anything leading up to this that might’ve been a potential HIPAA breach. That’s unlikely, but it’s possible."
According to research released this month from the IT Policy Compliance Group, 75 percent of all data breaches were caused by human error.