Women’s Wellness of Southern Delaware Data Breach Investigation
Women’s Wellness of Southern Delaware has reported a data incident that may affect patients and other individuals. A New Hampshire regulatory filing indicates that personal and health-related information may have been involved. If you received a notice, it is important to review it carefully and take steps to protect your accounts and medical information. You can also fill out the form on this page to see whether you may qualify for a claim.
Women’s Wellness of Southern Delaware is a healthcare provider located in Delaware. Based on publicly available regulatory information, the organization recently reported a hacking/IT incident that may have involved personal and medical information. The summary below is limited to what is currently available from public filings.
Key Facts at a Glance
- Company: Women’s Wellness of Southern Delaware
- Industry: Healthcare
- Location: Delaware
- Incident type: Reported hacking/IT incident
- Incident date: According to the filing, April 28, 2026
- Notice date: According to the filing, June 26, 2026
- Public listing date: June 29, 2026
- Information reported as involved: Name, address, financial account number, and health records
- Affected individuals: Not stated in the available filing
- Regulatory reference: New Hampshire Attorney General filing
What Happened?
According to a public filing with the New Hampshire Attorney General, the organization reported a hacking/IT incident involving its network. The filing identifies April 28, 2026 as the incident date and shows notice letters dated June 26, 2026.
Detailed information from the official notice is not publicly accessible at this time. The following summary is therefore based on regulatory filings rather than a full public copy of the notice. As a result, some important details, such as how the activity was discovered, how long it lasted, and whether any third party was involved, are not currently available in the public record reviewed here.
What Information Was Exposed?
The public filing lists the following categories of information as potentially involved: name, address, financial account number, and health records. Publicly available materials do not currently explain whether every listed data element applied to every affected person.
When health information and financial account information are reported in the same incident, the risks can include account fraud, medical identity misuse, and phishing attempts that use personal details to appear legitimate. If you received a letter, the notice you received may provide more specific information about what data related to you may have been involved.
What Should You Do Next?
- Read any notice carefully. Check whether the letter describes the specific information that may have been involved in your case and keep a copy for your records.
- Monitor your financial accounts. Review bank and credit union statements for unfamiliar charges or transfers. If your financial account number may have been involved, consider contacting the financial institution to ask about extra monitoring or account changes.
- Watch your medical and insurance records. Review explanation-of-benefits statements, bills, and patient portal activity for services you do not recognize.
- Consider credit protections. You may want to place a fraud alert or security freeze on your credit files and request your free credit reports to look for suspicious activity.
- Stay alert for phishing. Be cautious with calls, emails, or texts that mention appointments, billing, refunds, or account verification and ask for passwords, payment information, or other sensitive data.
- Document problems and ask questions. Save letters, screenshots, account statements, and notes about any suspicious activity. If you want to understand whether you may have legal options, contact us using the form provided on this page.
Your Legal Rights
If your information was involved in a reported data incident, you may have legal rights depending on the facts, the type of information at issue, and the laws that apply. In some situations, affected individuals may seek relief if a company failed to use reasonable safeguards, did not provide required notice, or exposed them to measurable harm.
Because the publicly available information is limited, it may not yet be possible to assess the full scope of potential claims. Even so, preserving your notice letter, tracking any out-of-pocket losses, and documenting unusual account or medical activity can be important if more facts become available later.
Why Hire Strauss Borrelli PLLC?
Strauss Borrelli PLLC represents individuals in data breach and privacy matters and has experience evaluating reported cybersecurity incidents, notice timelines, and potential consumer claims. Our team works to explain complex situations in plain English and help people understand what practical next steps may make sense.
If you received a notice about this reported incident, Strauss Borrelli PLLC can review the available information and help you understand whether you may have a claim. Filling out the form on this page is a simple way to request a review.
If you received a breach notification letter from Women's Wellness of Southern Delaware:
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.










