Cylera has
formed its first Advisory Council bringing together World leaders in
cybersecurity to share insight and drive innovation to help tackle the myriad
of security challenges facing today's rapidly digitalizing healthcare
sector.
As a critical infrastructure, healthcare remains a top
target for cybercriminals with access to rich patient data and a potential to
cause significant damage and disruption to patient care. This threat is ever
greater with rising geopolitical tensions and potential state-sponsored
attacks. 89% of US healthcare organizations
experienced a breach last year with some of these reportedly attacked an
average of 43 times in those 12 months. More than 20% of these healthcare
organizations reported increased patient mortality rates due to the breach,
with delayed procedures and delayed medical tests the most common consequence.
The average cost of a data breach in the global healthcare sector amounted to
over $10 million last year according to IBM.
And the potential cybersecurity
risk to the sector is anticipated to get worse with further digitalization.
Timur Ozekcin, CEO of Cylera, said: "Healthcare is undergoing a particularly
dramatic digital transformation with accelerated spend in IoT expected to reach
$54 billion by 2029.
"Already medical devices account
for more than 30% of connected endpoints at hospitals with devices ranging from
X-Rays and CT machines, mobile ultrasound machines, radiotherapy and
chemotherapy devices plus online building systems and CCTVs," continued Tim.
"Also, the number of remotely monitored patients has risen sharply in the past
couple years. Connected environments are becoming increasingly more complex in
healthcare and, with the sector planning further digital investment tens of
thousands of more devices will join the IT
networks, many of which could be a security risk, expanding a hospital's attack
surface for threat actors to exploit.
"Remote user access, unsegmented
and potentially unmanaged networks, legacy operating systems and limited
visibility into IoT device risks are just some of the security challenges
keeping healthcare leaders and heads of
hospital IT awake at night as they try to navigate the complexities of today's
interconnected device landscape," added Timur.
The Cylera Cybersecurity Advisory
Council is made up of select members and involves CISOs, CIOs and CTOs from
major healthcare providers and hospitals along with private sector companies. The Council will meet at least four times a year to share
best practice, insight, and to address and tackle the unique security
challenges of increasing complex interconnected healthcare systems.
One of the Advisory Council members,
Brian Tschinkel, CISO at Weill Cornell Medicine, a leading academic health
system in New York, said: "Cyber threats to the healthcare sector are among the
most sophisticated and targeted across any industry. Healthcare networks are
incredibly complex with interconnected medical and IoT devices that caregivers
rely on to deliver the highest level of care to their patients. It is mission
critical for hospitals to have visibility of their attack surface and therefore
visibility into all connected assets to help secure their organizations. I look
forward to advising Cylera to help stay ahead
of future cybersecurity challenges."
The Advisory Council will also
guide Cylera in its global expansion plans and the latest innovations to its
IoT device cybersecurity and intelligence
platform. "Cylera is at the forefront of IoT
cybersecurity," added Tomás Maldonado CISO at the NFL (National Football
League) and Cylera Advisory Council member. "With increasing digitalization and
rapid adoption of IoT devices across every industry, including sports and
entertainment venues, it's imperative to stay ahead of the cybersecurity risks
to the connected devices that make up our new cyber-physical environments. I'm
delighted to be working through the Advisory Council to help shape the future
of Cylera on its mission to safeguard our connected world."