Reproductive Medicine Associates of Michigan Data Breach Exposes Patient Health Data

Published
January 13, 2026
Updated
January 13, 2026
Reproductive Medicine Associates of Michigan Data Breach Exposes Patient Health Data
Reproductive Medicine Associates of Michigan

Affected by the

Reproductive Medicine Associates of Michigan

data breach?

Join the Lawsuit

On Oct. 22, 2025, Reproductive Medicine Associates of Michigan, a fertility clinic based in Troy, discovered suspicious activity within its systems.

According to the official notice of data privacy event posted on the company's website, an investigation performed by third-party cybersecurity specialists revealed that an unknown actor gained unauthorized access and copied certain files from the clinic’s network.

At this stage, RMA of Michigan is conducting a comprehensive and time-intensive review of the affected files to determine what protected health information (PHI) and personally identifiable information (PII) may have been exposed and to whom it relates. The exact number of affected individuals has not yet been confirmed, as the data review is ongoing.

The full extent and specific details for each individual will be communicated directly once the review is complete.

Reproductive Medicine Associates of Michigan's response

RMA of Michigan responded to the incident by securing its network and launching a thorough investigation with the help of cybersecurity experts. The clinic has notified federal law enforcement and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services about the breach.

As the review of affected files continues, RMA of Michigan will mail a notice letter to each individual whose information is determined to be involved, provided they have a valid mailing address on file.

To support potentially impacted individuals, the clinic has set up a dedicated assistance line at 947-209-5587 for questions about the incident. The notice posted to their website details how to obtain free credit reports, place fraud alerts or security freezes on credit files, and contact the three major credit bureaus (Equifax, Experian and TransUnion).

They encourage patients to remain vigilant for signs of identity theft or fraud by monitoring their accounts and credit reports, and to report any suspicious activity to their financial institutions.

Types of INFORMATION affected
  • Names
    Names
  • Social security numbers
    Social Security Numbers
  • Dates of birth
    Dates of Birth
  • Addresses
    Addresses
  • Government IDs
    Government IDs
  • Medical Information
    Medical Info
  • Financial Info
    Financial Info
  • Affected information types not yet disclosed

Notice Letter

This browser does not support inline PDFs. Please download the PDF to view it: Download PDF

CTA Image
CTA Image
CTA Image
CTA Image
CTA Image
CTA Image
CTA Image
CTA Image
CTA Image