A hugely disruptive cyberattack in February exposed clear technology flaws at a UnitedHealth Group subsidiary, lawmakers said Wednesday, and raised difficult questions about whether the Minnetonka-based health care giant has become too big.
Andrew Witty, the UnitedHealth chief executive, offered an apology during testimony before the Senate Finance Committee as he disclosed that hackers accessed a portal at the company’s Change Healthcare unit that lacked multifactor authentication protections.
The breach exposed a significant failure to comply with “cybersecurity 101,” said the committee chair, Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore. There was bipartisan criticism of what one senator called a “monopoly on steroids,” with some senators also questioning why UnitedHealth Group couldn’t restore its systems more quickly.
The hack has caused nationwide havoc for health providers and by Witty’s own admission could involve the personal information of up to 1 of every 3 Americans.
Witty said he was frustrated by the technology problems, as well, adding that UnitedHealth was still in the process of upgrading security and systems after acquiring Change Healthcare in October 2022. While the CEO said the company’s size has enabled a strong response to the hack, Wyden promised further investigation both of the cyberattack and broader questions surrounding the company.
“The Change hack is a dire warning about the consequences of ‘too big to fail’ mega-corporations gobbling up larger and larger shares of the health care system,” Wyden said. “It is long past time to do a comprehensive scrub of UHG’s anti-competitive practices, which likely prolonged the fallout from this hack.”
UnitedHealth Group is Minnesota’s largest company by revenue and the fourth-largest firm in the United States by the same measure. The company’s UnitedHealthcare division is the nation’s largest health insurer. It also owns a fast-growing health services division called Optum that employs or is affiliated with about 90,000 physicians. Last year, it had about $22 billion in profits.
The company’s size was a recurring theme in the lawmakers’ questioning.