The Maturity Paradigm

In healthcare we have an insatiable appetite to adopt new technology

Should we be worried

About state-sponsored attacks against hospitals?

Security and the Board Need to Speak the Same Language

How security leaders speak to thier C-Suite and Board can make all the difference

Who'd want to be a CISO?

Challenging job, but increasingly well paid

Medical Tourism - Growing in Popularity

Safe, fun, and much, MUCH more cost-effecitive

The Changing Face of the Security Leader

The role is changing, but what does the future hold?

Cyber Risk Insurance Won't Save Your Reputation

Be careful what you purchase and for what reason

Showing posts with label HITSecurity Forum Boston 2017. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HITSecurity Forum Boston 2017. Show all posts

HITSecurity Forum

Richard Staynings addresses the audience at the HIMSS Healthcare Security Forum 2017
Richard Staynings, HIMSS Privacy & Security Committee. Photo: Tina Kitchen.


‘Security is an industry where we are continually developing new solutions without understanding the problem we are trying to fix’.

This was the basis for a presentation I gave to the HIMSS Healthcare Security Forum today in Boston.

Richard Staynings addresses the audience at the HIMSS Healthcare Security Forum 2017
Richard Staynings presents new security technologies. Photo: Malissa O'Rourke Miot.
The session discussed the adoption of new and emerging tools and approaches to secure healthcare data and IT system availability. Tools like NGFW, Micro-Segmentation, Biometrics and MFA, Blockchain, Big Data Analytics, Machine Learning and AI. Tools that boost automation, protection, visibility, and intelligence, leading to improved threat detection, and containment of inevitable attacks.

Richard Staynings
Richard Staynings discusses new security tools. Photo: Tina Kitchen.
As with any new tool or approach, security leaders need to fully understand the costs, benefits and drawbacks before adoption, and how quickly, easily or difficult each tool can be integrated into the existing infrastructure. Furthermore, they need to be able to articulate and defend exactly what business risk gaps, each tool will address, what business benefits it will provide to the organization and what legacy tools it will retire.

As security leaders, we need to work smarter, not harder, and with an average 65 disparate security vendors in each US hospital, we need to consolidate to a smaller, leaner and more manageable toolbox.

Richard Staynings addresses the audience at the HIMSS Healthcare Security Forum 2017
Photo: Tina Kitchen.
Thanks to the attendees, sponsors and organizers of the HIMSS Media Healthcare Security Forum today in Boston.