Active breach tracker CA Disclosed August 29, 2025

Reimagine Network Data Breach 2025: 4,799 Affected · Hacking/IT Incident · CA. Filed With HHS OCR. What To Do.

Reimagine Network (CA) filed a HIPAA breach notification with the HHS Office for Civil Rights on August 29, 2025, reporting 4,799 affected individuals in a Hacking/IT Incident event at Network Server. The HHS OCR portal entry is the primary public record; further details are not yet publicly disclosed on this page.

You have options. Scroll for the exact action steps, what your provider’s response covers, and what your health data needs beyond credit monitoring.

By HealthConsent Editorial Last updated Sources & methodology

Timeline

Aug 29, 2025

Disclosed publicly

Data exposed

03

Contact & insurance

Phishing + targeted scams

Not publicly disclosed beyond 'Network Server' on the OCR portal
If you received a letter

Your action plan, in five steps.

You have more rights than the notification letter explains. Each step below is a concrete thing you can do today. Full detail and timing in the sections that follow.

01

Accept credit monitoring

It’s the floor of the response. Take it.

02

Freeze your credit

Free at Equifax, Experian, TransUnion.

03

File IRS Form 14039

Prevent fraudulent tax return under your SSN.

04

Review your EOBs

Insurance statements catch medical identity theft early.

05

Stop the ongoing flow

Credit monitoring doesn’t cover your health records. HealthConsent does.

Jump to step 5: protect my health data

Reimagine Network filed a HIPAA breach notification with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office for Civil Rights on August 29, 2025, reporting 4,799 affected individuals in a Hacking/IT Incident event at Network Server. The entity is a Healthcare Provider based in CA.

This page reflects what the HHS OCR portal entry publicly discloses. Specific data elements exposed, attacker attribution, response details, credit-monitoring offerings, and any class-action filings are not yet summarized here. We update each page as the entity’s own notification letter, state attorney general filings, established trade press, or court filings become available.

What to do if you may be affected

Until the entity publishes its substitute notice or your individual notification letter arrives, the protective steps to take are generic but useful:

  • Freeze your credit with the three nationwide consumer reporting agencies. It is free, takes about ten minutes per bureau, and is the single highest-leverage step against identity theft.
  • Watch for a notification letter at the address on file with Reimagine Network. Notification letters typically follow the OCR filing by a few weeks. Read it carefully — it will list the specific data elements exposed and any complimentary credit-monitoring offered.
  • Bookmark this page. We update it as new information becomes publicly available.

Sources on this page

Stop your data from spreading further

Credit monitoring covers your wallet. HealthConsent covers your health records.

Your stolen diagnoses, test results, and medical record numbers don’t expire when the free credit-monitoring window ends. HealthConsent automates HIPAA restriction requests and opt-outs across providers, insurers, HIEs, and prescription networks so the data taken in this breach can’t keep being shared and sold by other entities downstream.

Protect my health data

Cancel anytime · Family plan covers spouses + dependents

Sources & further reading

Official HHS OCR Breach Portal: ocrportal.hhs.gov

About this page

This page is compiled from public regulatory filings, the breached entity’s own disclosures, and reporting from established healthcare-privacy outlets. Some sections are assembled with the help of automated research and may contain errors, summaries that lag the underlying source, or details that have since been revised. Treat it as a starting point, not legal advice or an authoritative record. If you spot something inaccurate, the linked sources above are the canonical record. For questions about your individual situation, contact the breached entity directly or consult a licensed attorney.