What is the Gaylord Specialty Healthcare Data Breach About?
Law firms are investigating a class action lawsuit for patients who may have been affected by a December
2024 cyberattack against Gaylord Specialty Healthcare in Wallingford, Connecticut. If you received a data
breach letter, act quickly.
Important Dates
• Incident Window: December 2024
• Notice Date: September 24, 2025
Which Types of Data were Hacked?
Potentially exposed data includes names, dates of birth, Social Security numbers, driver's license or state
ID numbers, bank card or financial account information, medical record information, and health insurance
data.
How Do I Qualify for Compensation?
If you received a letter from Gaylord Specialty Healthcare notifying you that your personal information was
impacted, use the link below to request a free case evaluation and check eligibility for potential compensation.
Has Gaylord Specialty Healthcare Confirmed a Class Action Lawsuit?
Law firms are actively investigating and reviewing claims. As of now, no settlement fund has been approved.
If enough affected patients come forward, a class action lawsuit or settlement could follow.
How Many Patients May Have Been Affected by the Data Breach?
The total number of impacted patients has not been publicly disclosed. The September 24, 2025 mailing date
indicates a potentially broad notice group.
What Risks Do Victims of the Gaylord Specialty Healthcare Breach Face?
Patients may face risks such as medical identity theft, financial fraud using bank or account numbers, and
misuse of Social Security and insurance information that can lead to long-term credit and privacy issues.
What Legal Rights Do Patients Have After a Healthcare Data Breach?
Individuals may have rights under state consumer protection and privacy laws. Depending on case facts,
victims can seek compensation through class actions or individual claims for out-of-pocket losses, time
spent, and identity protection costs.
Can I Recover Costs for Credit Monitoring or Identity Theft Services?
Victims may be eligible to recover costs for credit monitoring, identity protection, and related mitigation
expenses. Availability depends on whether litigation or a class action settlement provides reimbursement.
What Steps Should Patients Take After a Data Breach?
Save your breach notice letter, monitor medical and financial accounts, set up alerts, consider a fraud
alert or credit freeze, request an explanation of benefits review from your insurer, and speak with a data
breach attorney to review eligibility.
Find all the latest class actions you can qualify for by getting notified of new lawsuits as soon as they are open to claims:
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