State suspends Brooksville insurer over offshore Medicare data sharing
A Brooksville insurer handling Medicare claims for 23,119 people was suspended after state regulators said it sent sensitive data offshore.

More than 23,000 Medicare Advantage enrollees tied to a Brooksville-area insurer were put at risk after Florida regulators suspended Mirra Health Care LLC, saying the company shared sensitive patient data with unlicensed firms in India and the Philippines.
The Florida Office of Insurance Regulation issued an immediate final order on March 23, 2026, suspending Mirra Health’s certificate of authority for up to one year under section 626.891(3), Florida Statutes. Commissioner Mike Yaworsky called the conduct “extremely reckless” and “not competent or trustworthy,” and the agency said the company’s actions posed an imminent threat to the public health, safety and welfare of Florida residents.
Mirra Health maintained contracts with three Florida domestic health maintenance organizations, Secur, Inc., Solis Health Plans, Inc. and Ultimate Health Plans, Inc. Through those agreements, the company handled core functions that affect whether seniors get care paid for and processed on time: member enrollment, claims adjudication and payment, utilization management, and grievance and appeals processing. The order said those duties touched 23,119 Florida Medicare Advantage enrollees, most of them in Chronic Condition Special Needs Plans, Dual Eligible Special Needs Plans and Institutional Special Needs Plans.
State regulators said Mirra Health unilaterally delegated claims-processing and other work to four unlicensed offshore entities, Data Marshall, BluOne India, LLP, HOM India Private Limited and Saibervet, LLC, operating in India and the Philippines. The company did so without prior written approval from the health plans or their enrollees, which the order said violated its contracts and created fraud risks.
The suspension could have immediate business fallout for the company and its clients. If plan administrators have to shift enrollment files, claims review, or appeals work to new vendors, that can create delays in payments, authorizations and member notices. For patients in C-SNP, D-SNP and I-SNP plans, even small disruptions can matter when prescriptions, specialist visits or long-term care decisions are pending.
Regulators also said Mirra Health did not produce all contracts requested during the examination, including a contract with Data Marshall. The office said it would continue to aggressively investigate the matter.
Public records place Mirra Health in Spring Hill and Brooksville in Hernando County, and state filings show the company was established on October 28, 2011. Dr. Pariksith Singh is listed in public records as the company contact. For local seniors and caregivers, the key issue now is whether plan paperwork, claims and appeals continue to move without interruption as the state’s enforcement action unfolds.
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