Southern Illinois Ob-Gyn Associates Data Breach Investigation
Southern Illinois Ob-Gyn Associates, S.C. has been publicly listed on the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office for Civil Rights breach portal in connection with a reported Hacking/IT Incident. The public listing shows 38,700 individuals as potentially affected and was posted on May 22, 2026. Detailed incident-specific notice information was not publicly accessible in the materials reviewed, so some key facts remain unclear. If you received a letter or believe your information may have been involved, review the steps below and fill out the form on this page to see whether you may qualify for a claim.
Southern Illinois Ob-Gyn Associates, S.C. is an Illinois healthcare provider. Because healthcare organizations often maintain sensitive patient and billing information, any reported cybersecurity event can raise understandable concerns for patients and families.
Key Facts at a Glance
- Company: Southern Illinois Ob-Gyn Associates, S.C.
- Industry: Healthcare
- Reported event type: Hacking/IT Incident
- Public listing date: May 22, 2026
- Individuals listed as affected: 38,700
- Incident date: Not publicly specified in the materials reviewed
- Notice date: Not publicly specified in the materials reviewed
- Information involved: Not publicly specified in the materials reviewed
- Current source basis: HHS OCR breach portal materials and related public resources
What Happened?
According to a public listing on the HHS Office for Civil Rights breach portal, Southern Illinois Ob-Gyn Associates, S.C. reported a Hacking/IT Incident. The listing became public on May 22, 2026. At this time, detailed information from an incident-specific notice does not appear to be publicly accessible in the materials reviewed, so important details such as when the event occurred, when it was discovered, and what systems were involved have not been confirmed here.
That means readers should be careful not to assume facts that have not yet been disclosed. If you received a direct notice letter or email from the organization, that communication may contain more detail than the public listing currently provides.
What Information Was Exposed?
The public materials reviewed do not identify the specific categories of information that may have been involved. In other words, there is currently no public incident-specific detail here confirming whether the reported event involved medical records, health insurance information, Social Security numbers, financial data, or other personal information.
If you are trying to determine your own risk, the most reliable source will usually be any direct notice sent to you. Keep that notice, because it may explain what information was involved and whether the organization is offering any support services.
What Should You Do Next?
- Watch for official communications. Keep any letter, email, or patient portal message you receive about this reported incident. Those materials may identify the data involved and any services being offered.
- Review medical and financial activity. Check explanation-of-benefits statements, medical bills, insurance correspondence, and bank or card activity for anything unfamiliar.
- Change passwords if appropriate. If you use the same password across accounts tied to this provider or related services, update it and enable multi-factor authentication where available.
- Consider fraud protections if sensitive identifiers are later confirmed. If a notice says Social Security numbers or similar data may have been involved, a fraud alert or credit freeze may be worth considering.
- Document problems and ask questions. Save suspicious bills, denied claims, collection notices, or other records. If you want to understand whether you may have a legal claim, fill out the form on this page to contact Strauss Borrelli PLLC.
Your Legal Rights
If your information was involved in a reported healthcare data incident, you may have legal rights depending on the facts. Those rights can include receiving notice, learning what categories of information were affected once they are confirmed, and pursuing a claim if inadequate safeguards or delayed notice caused measurable harm.
Whether a claim exists depends on the actual evidence, including what data was involved, what the organization knew, what response steps were taken, and whether you experienced misuse, expenses, or time spent addressing the problem. This page provides general information, not individualized legal advice, but preserving your records can help you better understand your options.
Why Hire Strauss Borrelli PLLC?
Strauss Borrelli PLLC represents consumers in data breach and privacy incident matters and investigates reported security events to determine whether affected individuals may have viable legal claims. Our team can review the available public information, help you understand what questions to ask, and assess whether the reported Southern Illinois Ob-Gyn Associates incident may support a case.
If you believe you may have been affected, you can contact Strauss Borrelli PLLC using the form provided on this page for a free, no-obligation review.
If you received a breach notification letter from Southern Illinois Ob-Gyn Associates:
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.










