Suvida Healthcare, LLC, which operates Medicare Advantage-affiliated primary care centers serving Hispanic seniors in Texas and Arizona, has confirmed a data breach exposing patients’ medical information, health insurance information, and dates of birth. As of the company’s July 14, 2026 filing with the Texas Attorney General, at least 2,109 Texas residents were affected.
Here’s what makes this one different: Texas’s own breach registry lists “Notice Provided to Consumers: No” as of that July 14 filing. In other words, Suvida Healthcare told the state regulator before it told the patients whose medical records were exposed.
Why This Matters
Suvida Healthcare serves a Medicare Advantage patient population that is largely elderly and Spanish-speaking, a group that is both a common target for medical identity theft and, in many cases, less likely to have a notification letter reach them quickly or be able to act on it right away.
If you or a family member is a Suvida Healthcare patient in Texas or Arizona, you may not have received anything in the mail yet, but that does not mean your information wasn’t exposed. The state filing confirms the breach occurred and confirms what was taken; it does not mean patients have been told.
What Information Was Exposed?
Based on the Texas Attorney General filing, the compromised information includes:
- Medical Information
- Health Insurance Information
- Full Date of Birth
What Is Suvida Healthcare Offering Affected Patients?
As of this writing, Suvida Healthcare has not publicly detailed a credit monitoring or identity protection offer, and, per the state filing, has not yet confirmed sending notification letters to patients. If you receive a letter, review it carefully for enrollment instructions and deadlines. If you don’t receive one but believe you may be a Suvida patient affected by this breach, you do not have to wait for a letter to ask questions or take action.
Your Information Is at Risk
Medical information and health insurance details are especially valuable to identity thieves because they enable medical identity theft, using someone else’s identity and insurance to obtain medical care, prescriptions, or equipment, which can also corrupt the victim’s own medical records.
Affected individuals, or anyone who receives care through a Suvida Healthcare location, should:
- Request an explanation of benefits (EOB) review from your Medicare Advantage plan for any unfamiliar services
- Monitor for unexpected medical bills, collection notices, or insurance denials
- Ask Suvida Healthcare directly whether your information was involved
- Keep records of any communication (or lack of communication) from Suvida Healthcare about this incident
Do You Have Legal Options?
Healthcare providers that collect medical and health insurance information have a legal obligation to safeguard it and to notify affected patients without unreasonable delay. A state filing that shows notice has not yet been provided to consumers raises real questions about whether that obligation is being met.
Contact the Data Breach Attorneys at Emery | Reddy today for a Free Case Review.
FAQ
How many people were affected by the Suvida Healthcare data breach?
At least 2,109 Texas residents, per the July 14, 2026 filing with the Texas Attorney General. Suvida also operates in Arizona; no Arizona figure has been disclosed.
What information was exposed?
Medical information, health insurance information, and full date of birth.
Has Suvida Healthcare notified patients yet?
As of the July 14, 2026 state filing, the Texas Attorney General’s record listed consumer notice as not yet provided. If you’re a Suvida patient, you may not have received a letter even though the breach has been confirmed to the state.
What should I do if I’m a Suvida Healthcare patient?
You don’t need to wait for a letter, you can contact Suvida Healthcare directly to ask if your information was involved, watch your insurance and medical statements closely, and consider speaking with a data breach attorney about your options.