Catalina Dermatology Data Breach Investigation
A public regulatory listing dated May 4, 2026, associates Ronald M Mann MD PC dba Catalina Dermatology with a reported hacking/IT incident. Based on the materials reviewed, detailed notice information such as the incident date, affected population, and specific data elements has not been publicly confirmed. If you received a letter or email about this matter, it is important to take practical steps now and keep copies of anything you received. You can also fill out the form on this page to have Strauss Borrelli PLLC review whether you may qualify for a claim.
Ronald M Mann MD PC, doing business as Catalina Dermatology, is a healthcare provider in Arizona. As a medical practice, it may maintain patient, insurance, and billing information in the ordinary course of providing care. Public materials reviewed in connection with this matter indicate a reported cybersecurity incident, but detailed company-specific notice information was not publicly available.
Key Facts at a Glance
- Entity: Ronald M Mann MD PC dba Catalina Dermatology
- Industry: Healthcare
- Location: Arizona
- Reported incident type: Hacking/IT incident, according to regulatory listing information
- Public listing date: May 4, 2026
- Incident date: Not publicly confirmed in the materials reviewed
- Notice date: Not publicly confirmed in the materials reviewed
- Information involved: Not publicly specified in the materials reviewed
- Number of people affected: Not publicly specified in the materials reviewed
What Happened?
A public regulatory listing associates the practice with a reported hacking/IT incident. Detailed information from a company-specific official notice is not publicly accessible in the materials reviewed at this time, so the precise timeline, the method of access, and the systems reportedly involved have not been confirmed here. This summary is therefore based on limited regulatory information rather than a detailed patient notice.
Because the currently available materials are limited, readers should be cautious about assumptions or online speculation. If you received a direct notice letter or email, that document may contain important details that are not yet reflected in public listings.
What Information Was Exposed?
The public materials reviewed do not identify the specific data elements that may have been involved. As a result, this page cannot confirm whether names, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, medical information, insurance details, or financial information were part of the reported incident.
In healthcare-related cybersecurity matters, affected individuals often watch for signs of misuse involving medical billing, insurance activity, patient portal access, or identity-related fraud. Even when the exact categories are not yet public, it is reasonable to review statements and account activity carefully.
What Should You Do Next?
- Keep any notice you received. Save letters, emails, screenshots, and envelopes. Those records may help show what the provider said, when notice was sent, and what information may have been involved.
- Review medical and financial activity. Check explanation-of-benefits statements, patient portal activity, bank and credit card accounts, and insurance communications for anything unfamiliar.
- Consider credit protections. If sensitive personal information may have been involved, consider placing a fraud alert or security freeze with the major credit bureaus.
- Update passwords where appropriate. If you reused passwords on health-related or financial accounts, change them and enable multi-factor authentication when available.
- Document suspicious events. Keep notes about denied claims, unexpected bills, collection notices, suspicious calls, or other possible misuse.
- Ask whether you may have a claim. If you received notice tied to this matter, you can fill out the form on this page to have Strauss Borrelli PLLC review your situation.
Your Legal Rights
If your personal or health information may have been involved, you may have legal rights depending on the facts, the kind of information at issue, and the laws that apply. In data incident matters, people commonly ask whether the organization used reasonable security measures, whether notice was timely and complete, and whether any monitoring or remediation was offered.
You may also be entitled to more information about what happened and what steps were taken in response. An attorney can help review the available facts, explain possible options in plain language, and discuss what documentation may be useful. This page is general information only and not individualized legal advice.
Why Hire Strauss Borrelli PLLC?
Strauss Borrelli PLLC represents individuals in data breach and privacy matters and has experience helping people evaluate claims after reported cybersecurity incidents. Our firm understands how frustrating it is when public information is limited and works to make the available facts clearer.
If you received a notice connected to the reported Catalina Dermatology incident, Strauss Borrelli PLLC can help assess what was disclosed, what risks may matter, and whether further legal action should be considered. Reaching out is a straightforward way to get informed without having to sort through the issue alone.
If you received a breach notification letter from Catalina Dermatology:
We would like to speak with you about your rights and potential legal remedies in response to this data breach. Please fill out the form, below, or contact us at 872.263.1100 or sam@straussborrelli.com.










