Alison Baulos says her 73-year-old father was about to head to a Kentucky hospital for open-heart surgery when it was abruptly canceled early Friday morning. His was one of the many operations and medical treatments halted across the country because of a global technology outage.
''It does really make you just realize how much we rely on technology and how scary it is,'' Baulos said from her home in Chicago.
The major internet outage disrupted flights, banks and businesses, as well as medical centers, around the world. The outage was caused by a faulty software update issued by a cybersecurity firm that affected its customers running Microsoft Windows.
The American Hospital Association said the impact varied widely: Some hospitals were not affected while others had to delay, divert or cancel care.
Baulos said her father, Gary Baulos, was told Wednesday that some routine tests showed that he had eight blockages and an aneurysm, and needed surgery. He prepped for the surgery Thursday and got a hotel near Baptist Hospital in Paducah, Kentucky, about an hour from home. He was about to head to the hospital at about 4 a.m. Friday when he received a call that the operation had to be postponed because of the outage. Phone messages left with the spokesperson at Baptist Hospital seeking comment were not immediately returned.
Alison Baulos said her father made the best of it — he treated himself to a pancake breakfast since he was already up and had nowhere to go.
At the Guthrie Clinics in New York and Pennsylvania, the emergency departments were open but outpatient lab tests and routine imaging appointments were canceled. All elective surgeries were postponed and clinics were operating on paper Friday morning, according to information posted on the health system's website.
Sahana Singh arrived at the clinic in Ithaca, New York, at 9 a.m. to learn her heart test would have to be rescheduled in two weeks.