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First Healthcare Compliance CONNECT March 2022

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Hardware Hacking in <strong>Healthcare</strong>:<br />

Expert Insights<br />

Catherine Short<br />

John Shegerian, Co-Founder, Chairman and<br />

CEO of ERI recently shared expert insights in<br />

the presentation, The Insecurity of Everything:<br />

Hardware Hacking Trends.<br />

Data security regulations now exist in all fifty states,<br />

federally, and internationally. Risks are universal as<br />

all businesses and individuals including healthcare<br />

professionals utilize devices that retain data that<br />

becomes vulnerable to cybercriminals. The healthcare<br />

industry and hospitals are increasingly at risk for<br />

ransomware and other types of cyberattacks. Several<br />

recent examples illustrate the risks and repercussions<br />

that result from a combination of inadequate resources<br />

and a lack of clear and effective cybersecurity guidelines.<br />

The pandemic has amplified many of the cyber risks<br />

associated with breaches and hardware hacking in<br />

healthcare. According to Shegerian, “Many of you are<br />

working from home or working in some sort of hybrid<br />

situation. We’ve learned that due to COVID, people<br />

started working for home without all the guardrails that<br />

are typically set up by CTOs in hospitals and healthcare<br />

settings. Workers at home unfortunately, started using<br />

their personal hardware, tablets, cell phones, laptops,<br />

desktops, for business<br />

purposes, and their<br />

business hardware, for<br />

personal purposes, it<br />

just happens when we<br />

have time crunches,<br />

when something breaks<br />

down, and we must go<br />

to a backup plan. That<br />

means there’s a cross<br />

contamination when data from one platform gets on to<br />

another. There’s a cross contamination of your personal<br />

data onto your professional hardware. And vice versa.<br />

This means if you work for a healthcare organization, or<br />

agency, and you believe there’s a chance that you’ve<br />

had cross contamination, which I’d be shocked if there<br />

wasn’t please adhere to the protocols provided by your<br />

Chief Technology Officer. Make sure data and devices are<br />

responsibly destroyed when it comes to end of life, not<br />

put on eBay or Craigslist.”<br />

To learn more, please stay tuned for John’s future<br />

podcast with host Catherine Short on 1st Talk<br />

<strong>Compliance</strong>.<br />

6<br />

<strong>First</strong> <strong>Healthcare</strong> <strong>Compliance</strong>, LLC © <strong>2022</strong>

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