Experts On Healthcare breaches fall by 10% in the first half of 2020

By   ISBuzz Team
Writer , Information Security Buzz | Aug 14, 2020 12:03 am PST

CI Security has released today its healthcare data breach report, which analysed data from the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). The analysis found that healthcare breach reports in the first half of this year were down 10.4% compared to the second half of 2019, with the number of breached records falling by nearly 83%.

Below are some comments from cybersecurity experts explaining why we have observed such a decline in healthcare breaches in 2020.

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Warren Poschman
Warren Poschman , Senior Solutions Architect
August 14, 2020 8:06 am

The healthcare industry may be the most vulnerable of all industries to cyber attacks. It\’s about the data healthcare operators have access to. The security challenge for healthcare operators is extremely difficult, especially when data is stored in different locations and accessed through various technologies. However, we may be seeing a shift in approaches from ‘secure the technology,’ to ‘secure the data,’ which will reduce the threat of data loss and exposure when (not if) a cyber-attack happens.

While it is not always possible to prevent malicious access, sophisticated data protection is a must when processing and storing sensitive information – especially PII and healthcare records. These are core requirements of data privacy regulations like HIPAA and GDPR and here might be fines coming up for this.

Last edited 3 years ago by Warren Poschman
Robert Meyers
Robert Meyers , Channel Solutions Architect and Fellow of Information Privacy
August 14, 2020 8:04 am

It is safe to suspect that this decrease might be due to lower reporting. The reason is simple, the world changed. The COVID-19 outbreak changed the way organisations work, and shifted everyone\’s priorities.

Organisations had to move people to work from home at a breakneck pace, and it is no secret that security and privacy were not high on the list of priorities. Many organisations expected reduced enforcement of breaches during the time, and some still do.

So, while things may have calmed back down and organisations may have settled into their new, remote working set-up, we can expect a rise in breaches reported in the second half of the year, and an artificially low number in the first half of the year. Remember, we are still dealing with this forced “digital transformation”.

Last edited 3 years ago by Robert Meyers

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