Court documents reveal that, in the case of Manage My Health, the data breach included information from 45 GP practices based in Northland. However, the stolen information also involved 355 “referral-originating” medical practices across several regions. The information taken included clinical discharge summaries, referrals and related files, and information uploaded to the system by patients. The injunction aimed to stop “all persons from accessing or in any way dealing with the stolen data, including storing, broadcasting, publishing, sharing, disclosing, or using any information taken from the stolen data”. In its application for a High Court injunction over misuse of its data, Neighbourly said about 150 gigabytes of information had been stolen on a specific “occasion” when the vulnerability was exploited.
Source: New Zealand Herald January 07, 2026 01:03 UTC