Stryker flags disruption to orders, manufacturing a day after cyberattack

The logo of Stryker medical technology is seen on their plant in the IDA (Industrial Development Agency) estate, in Carrigtwohill, County Cork, Ireland March 28, 2025. REUTER
 (Reuters) – Medical device maker Stryker said on Thursday a cyberattack that hit its ​computer systems a day earlier is ‌causing widespread disruption to its business, including its ability to process orders, make products and ​ship them to customers.
An Iranian-linked hacking ​group called Handala claimed responsibility for ⁠the attack, saying it was in ​retaliation to a strike on a girls’ ​school in Minab, southern Iran.
The school was hit on the first day of U.S.-Israeli attacks on ​Iran, killing an estimated 150 students, according ​to Iran’s ambassador to the U.N. in Geneva, Ali ‌Bahreini. ⁠Reuters has not independently verified the figure.
Stryker first disclosed the issue on March 11, saying it had experienced a global disruption ​to its ​Microsoft ⁠environment.
The incident has not affected any patient-related services and its connected ​medical products, the company said, ​even ⁠though the full scale and financial impact are not yet known.
The company, which has ⁠56,000 ​employees and operations in ​61 countries, said its investigation is ongoing.

Reporting by Kamal ​Choudhury in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun Koyyur

 

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