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Scale of the risk landscape
The outlook is clear. The increasing number of connected devices integrated into health care services means more risk. In hospitals, as much as 53% — more than half — of connected medical devices have been found to have known vulnerabilities.2 More than one-third (33%) of Internet of Things (IoT) devices have been identified as having critical risk factors that will impact operation and functionality,3 and according to the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), there is an average of 6.2 present vulnerabilities per medical device4 — meaning the threat to health care providers is no longer theoretical. The problem could worsen as US health care expenditure is set to reach $7.2 trillion by 2031.5 All this significantly increases the likelihood of ransomware attacks, operational disruption, regulatory penalties and, most importantly, harm to patient safety.
Secure by design: building for performance and protection
The challenge in medical device cybersecurity is not new. Health care providers and organizations frequently, for budgetary or process reasons, use legacy devices and outdated software, making security difficult in today’s evolving risk landscape. According to a HIMSS Healthcare Survey, 50% of oncology, pharmacology and laboratory departments operate on outdated Windows software incapable of receiving updates. Furthermore, interoperability across the health care ecosystem can increase vulnerabilities too, especially if proper authentication and encryption measures are not in place.