London Drugs closes all of its pharmacies following ‘cybersecurity incident’

London Drugs closes all of its pharmacies following ‘cybersecurity incident’

Updated Canadian pharmacy chain London Drugs closed all of its stores over the weekend until further notice following a “cybersecurity incident.”

On Sunday, the British Columbia-based giant with more than 80 outlets said an “operational issue” forced the closure of its locations across British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba.

“Pharmacists are standing by to support with urgent pharmacy needs,” the biz said in a social media post. “We advise customers to phone their local store’s pharmacy to make arrangements.”

A London Drugs spokesperson told The Register a “cybersecurity incident,” discovered on Sunday, was behind the store closures. They declined to answer specific questions about the break-in – including if ransomware was deployed – and issued the following statement:

While there is no indication who or what caused incident, or if ransomware was involved, the disruption echoes the earlier Change Healthcare ransomware infection in the US that also impacted pharmacies’ ability to fill prescriptions and check patients’ eligibility for medications. 

And it comes as criminals increasingly target healthcare organizations and their suppliers with extortion and other cybercrimes. 

In October, five southern Ontario hospitals shut down their IT systems and canceled patient appointments following a cyberattack against the hospitals’ service provider TransForm.

TransForm is a nonprofit founded by the Ontario hospitals: Windsor Regional Hospital, Erie Shores HealthCare, Hôtel-Dieu Grace Healthcare, Bluewater Health, and the Chatham-Kent Health Alliance. It manages their IT, supply chain, and accounts payable services, and transmits one million patient-related messages each day.

Ransomware crew Daixin Team took responsibility for the intrusion, and claimed to have stolen millions of patients’ records that were later leaked online, after hospital officials refused to pay the gang’s ransom demands. ®

Updated to add at 2330 UTC

Spokespeople for London Drugs have been in touch to say the phone lines are now down, and people should instead go to their stores for help. So, the opposite of what they said earlier. Here’s their statement:

Does that mean the stores are actually open? No. We asked if the pharmacies were opened or closed, and were told:

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