Health info is a giant target for hackers
A new report recommends that the health care sector carefully vet third-party service providers and limit their access to critical systems.
What: "Hacking Healthcare IT in 2016," a report from the Institute for Critical Infrastructure Technology
Why: ICIT's study seeks to apply lessons from the Office of Personnel Management breach to the health care sector. Like OPM, Anthem and Premera Blue Cross were hacked in 2015 via a third-party vendor connected to internal systems, the report states. Researchers also point a finger at a possible source for both intrusions: Deep Panda.
The report advises the health care sector to carefully vet third-party service providers and limit their access to critical systems.
As the industry continues to expand into telemedicine and medical devices connected to the Internet of Things, providers must use layered cybersecurity approaches to protect their vulnerable -- and valuable -- digital assets, the report states.
Verbatim: "The health care sector must invest in more robust and comprehensive organizational platforms because the value of data contained in their systems, combined with the lax security surrounding that data, is increasingly more appealing to nation-state actors, cyber criminals and hacktivists alike. Using only phishing attacks and exploit kits available on the dark net, even a 'script kiddie' might be able to compromise the system of a major health care provider.… The health care sector is the most targeted yet underprepared genre within our nation's critical infrastructures."
Read the full report here.