Tag Archive for: care

We must equip health care professionals with tech resilience


For weeks, a significant portion of our state has been significantly inconvenienced, even put at risk, by an increasingly disturbing trend. For nearly the entire month of August, Eastern Connecticut Health Network and Waterbury Health, which control several state hospitals and medical offices, have been suffering the effects of a cyberattack that have effectively paralyzed their technological capabilities, shutting down their information technology databases.

These are just some of 25 hospitals across the country that have had their operations impacted through this hack, and the significance of 25 hospitals being unable to provide care to their fullest extent cannot be understated. While treatment of patients is ongoing and emergency departments continue to operate, medical professionals are experiencing significant issues due to lack of connectivity through electronic systems. Local hospitals including Manchester Memorial, Rockville General and Waterbury Hospital cannot offer full outpatient medical imaging or blood drawings, with an unclear deadline or end to the outages. Even urgent care centers under the network have been forced to open alternative phone systems for patient contacts.

The continuing advances of technology in our world, and especially medical technology, have provided new opportunities to improve patient health and provide better outcomes for patients in need. In the current times, our dependency on technology also includes increasing access to remote work, electronic or e-consulting services and electronic multidisciplinary teams, almost universal electronic patients’ medical records, online scheduling, electronic radiologic images and other lab tests, robotic surgeries and remote cardiac monitoring among others. Technology has become the single most critical part of outpatient and inpatient services and communications.

Our increasing reliance on technology also poses significant risks. The current situation reinforces that our systems need more safeguards. This includes recognizing that in general, health service personnel have relatively less experience in working remotely, digital literacy and cybersecurity, leaving the sector…

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Ransomware Attack Disrupts Health Care in at Least Three States


A ransomware attack this week on a California-based health care system forced some of its locations to close and left others to rely on paper records.

The system, Prospect Medical Holdings, which operates 16 hospitals and more than 165 clinics and outpatient centers in Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Southern California, announced the cyberattack on Thursday.

A Prospect Medical spokesman could not estimate on Saturday when services would return to normal. It was not immediately clear how many of the system’s sites were affected.

On its website, Eastern Connecticut Health Network, an affiliate of Prospect Medical, listed locations that would be closed until further notice, including a medical imaging center, an urgent care facility and an outpatient blood-draw center, among others.

CharterCARE Health Partners, a Rhode Island affiliate, said on Facebook Thursday that it had to reschedule some of its appointments and to revert to paper records. The Philadelphia Inquirer reported that computers were also down at Crozer Health facilities in Delaware County.

“Prospect Medical Holdings, Inc. recently experienced a data security incident that has disrupted our operations,” the company said in a statement on Saturday. “Upon learning of this, we took our systems offline to protect them and launched an investigation with the help of third-party cybersecurity specialists.”

The company said it was focused on “addressing the pressing needs of our patients as we work diligently to return to normal operations as quickly as possible.”

It did not provide details on the nature of the security breach.

Waterbury Hospital, in Waterbury, Conn., said on Saturday that it was continuing to have disruptions. It also said that some of its outpatient and diagnostic imaging services had not been available on Friday or Saturday. On Thursday, it said it was relying on paper records.

Cyberattacks on hospitals have become more common, said John Riggi, senior cybersecurity adviser to the American Hospital Association.

In 2022, One Brooklyn Health, a hospital group that serves low-income neighborhoods in New York, was hit by a cyberattack that also forced staff members to use paper records….

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Jasson Casey, Beyond Identity: “malware doesn’t care if your password is four characters or four thousand characters long”


The increasing reliance on using the internet has businesses, governments, and individuals more aware of data security and identity protection. One of the primary concerns is password protection.

No matter how secure your passwords are, cybercriminals with the right malware will find a way to steal them. Even the leading VPN might be insufficient for full data protection and online security. Cybercriminals have access to the same advancing technology and software apps that the rest of the public does. That access resulted in an increase in cyberattacks by stealing passwords. Avoiding these risks means taking the time to learn more about preventative measures.

To discuss the issue in more detail, we spoke with Jasson Casey, the CTO at Beyond Identity – cybersecurity company advancing toward Zero Trust Authentication through constant risk assessment and continuous security validations.

How did Beyond Identity originate? What has the journey been like?

Two and a half decades ago, our founders – Jim Clark and Tom Jermoluk, made the World Wide Web accessible to all. They made it ready for business. Jim spearheaded the release of the Netscape browser along with SSL for secure Internet transactions. Tom focused on large-scale home broadband access with @Home Network. As businesses, governments, and individuals increasingly relied on the Internet, so too did bad actors. Bad actors eroded trust, stole intellectual property, and pilfered funds.

There are hundreds of billions of passwords in the world today. Yet, we continue to rely on this fundamentally insecure authentication model. Passwords are insecure because these “shared secrets” transit networks get stored in unprotected databases. They are also shared among friends and family. Ultimately, they’re reused across multiple apps. With the creation of Beyond Identity, the SaaS platform goes above and beyond FIDO standards. Our passwordless, invisible MFA supports broad authentication use cases. It turns all devices (including computers, tablets, and phones) into secure authenticators. Our platform validates the user and verifies the device is authorized. It checks the security posture of the device and executes an…

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TikTok users shrug at China fears: ‘It’s hard to care’


  • By Natalie Sherman
  • Business reporter, New York

Image caption,

Liz Barr says she was annoyed when her university blocked TikTok, but it hasn’t stopped her using it

TikTok has been banned on government networks and devices in the US, Canada and the European Union. But are the moves having any effect?

When TikTok would not load on her university’s wi-fi network earlier this year student Liz Barr was stymied – but not for long.

She soon figured ways around the block using personal mobile data or a virtual private network (VPN). The block had been introduced after state officials in Maryland banned the video app on government networks, citing national security concerns.

“I was annoyed, because I live here and I get bored,” says the 18-year-old, who is studying computer science and creative writing at St Mary’s College of Maryland. “But now it works, so it’s not that big of a problem.”

The workaround shows the quandary facing the US and other countries as they threaten to crack down on TikTok, which has exploded in global popularity in recent years offering an endless feed of user-generated makeup tutorials, life hacks, silly dances, and other confessionals curated by algorithm.

Rumbling against the social media platform, which is owned by the Chinese tech giant ByteDance and has more than one billion users globally, has reached new pitch in recent months.

Concerns have been especially loud in the US, where politicians from across the ideological spectrum are urging steps to curtail its reach, arguing that the data TikTok collects could be used by the Chinese government to spy on Americans or influence political debates.

Video caption,

Watch: Ros Atkins on… The creeping TikTok bans

Dozens of states, like Maryland, have banned TikTok on government networks and devices, moves that affect access in public libraries, universities and elsewhere.

TikTok’s chief executive is due to appear this month in Congress, which is debating various proposals that could result in a wider national ban, while the company remains in a years-long negotiation with the White House about what changes it could make to satisfy the…

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