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 Singapore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Singapore. Show all posts

Singapore eHealth - Innovative Technologies and Security


The Author addresses the Singapore eHealth Summit. Photo: Dean Koh

Singapore faces many of the same problems affecting patient care in Europe and North America; an aging population, rising demand and increasing costs. The need to implement more value-driven initiatives to increase efficiency and improve patient outcomes will become critical here in Singapore just as it is in other countries with declining populations or unsustainable rising healthcare costs. This includes the need for wider mainstream adoption of new and disruptive technologies like data analytics, machine learning and artificial intelligence, combined with highly innovative procedures to accurately identify, diagnose and treat patients.

The recent Singapore eHealth and Health 2.0 summit was unique in that it brought together some of the best minds and best ideas from all over the world under one roof, to showcase a plethora of quality treatment ideas and disruptive emerging technologies which promise to revolutionize the healthcare industry.

As with the adoption of any new technologies, there are risks which must first be evaluated before a technology can be introduced, and in healthcare, increasingly these risks focus upon cybersecurity.

In Singapore, which suffered its largest ever breach last year with the theft of 1.5m SingHealth patient identities along with the prescription records of its Prime Minister and other V.I.P.s, security is of particular concern. Several smaller healthcare breaches this year including publication of the personal details of over 800,000 blood donors, and the exposure of 14,200 HIV patient records has compounded the need for the industry to get security right.

Confidentiality, Integrity and Availability

The ASEAN region, according to CIO Magazine, with its dynamic position as one of the fastest growing digital economies in the world has become a prime target for cyber-attacks, accounting for 35.9% of all cyber attacks globally in 2017. The targeted attack against SingHealth is perhaps a wake-up call for the region to do a better job of securing Confidentiality, Integrity and Availability (CIA) its healthcare and other critical services.

But the risks impacting healthcare are way more nefarious than just the disclosure of confidential patient information. Far more worrying is the threat to the INTEGRITY of health records and other clinical data, and the AVAILABILITY of HIT systems needed to treat patients.
  • What happens when a patient's blood type, allergies or past treatment records are altered by a hacker?
  • What happens when a ransomware attack locks up all Health IT systems as it did to many hospitals in the British NHS with the WannaCry attack? 

Patient Care suffers and Patient Safety is placed at risk

The growth of medical devices and other Healthcare IoT (HIoT) is prolific and already outnumbers traditional computing systems. Compound growth in medical devices has reached 20% per year by some estimates. Furthermore, most are connected now to hospital networks and talk directly to core HIT systems like the Electronic Health Record. Hackers know this and have used the fact that HIoT systems are by and large unprotected against cyber-attack to launch their infiltration campaigns.




Many legacy medical devices can only connect to hospital WiFi using insure WEP encryption, which means any teenager with the right tools could gain access to core systems in most unsegmented healthcare networks with little more than a SmartPhone from a hospital waiting room.

Medical devices and other HIoT systems now pose the single greatest risk to patient safety according to many in the industry because of their lack of inherent security, inability to be patched or secured with AV or a host firewall as even a Windows PC can. What is more worrying is not that these devices are incredibly easy to hack or topple over, but the fact that they are most often connected to patients at the time providing critical life-sustaining care or telemetry.

On-stage demonstrations at security conferences like DefCon, Black Hat, and KiwiCon often feature the hacking of some sort of medical device that if connected to a real patient, would undoubtedly result in that patients death. Yet, the US FDA, Australia TGA, UK MHRA, and EU EMA, device manufacturers, and hospitals all downplay the risks, knowing that devices have a 15 to 20 year lifespan and few if any, are ever updated with security patches once sold.

The fact of the matter is that we have almost no idea if, and how many patients have died as a result of a medical device being hacked. No one currently is required to forensically investigate a failed medical device. Instead when is device is suspected of failing, all data is wiped to comply with HIPAA, GDPR, SPA, and other privacy rules and the device is shipped back to the manufacturer to be re-imaged, tested and put back into circulation. This is a subject I have written about in the past and one perhaps best demonstrated by Doctors Christian Dameff, MD and Jeff Tully, MD from the University of California Health System, in their realistic yet alarming presentation at the RSA Conference last year.

The need to better understand and evaluate risk in this growing sector of healthcare has reached a tipping point, as OCR in the United States and the TGA in Australia, starts to ask questions about risk analysis of these devices many of which are covered under the HIPAA Security Rule and the APA. However healthcare IT and Security teams face several daunting challenges before they can mitigate security risks and chase compliance.

1. In most hospitals, medical devices are owned and managed by Bio-Medical or Clinical Engineering, while other groups also outside of IT, manage building management and other hospital IoT systems. Consequently, there is limited security visibility, if any at all!

2. An accurate inventory of what HIoT assets are connected to the network is almost impossible to accomplish manually as devices change all the time and manual spreadsheets and traditional IT asset management systems have proven inaccurate.

3. Evaluating the risks of medical devices is difficult since most are connected to patients and cannot be scanned with normal security tools. Larger equipment like X-Ray machines, MRI, CT and PET scanners are in use 24/7 and cannot usually be taken out of service for regular security scans.

4. Inherent weaknesses in some HIoT protocols like DICOM allows a malicious actor to embed weaponized malware into a legitimate image file without detection, as researchers at Cylera Labs discovered recently.

5. Lack of internal network security allows a hacker to intercept and change a PACS image with false information during transmission between a CT scanner and its PACS workstation, adding a tumor to an image or removing one as security researchers at Ben Gurion University recently discovered.





Fortunately, new AI security tools from Cylera, created especially with healthcare in mind, are able to automate the entire risk management process to identify, profile, assess, remediate and manage HIoT assets in line with NIST SP800-30 standards. Just as healthcare delivery is moving towards disruptive innovative technologies, so are the security risk management tools being used to support the adoption of new technologies and new procedures.

Cylera’s 'MedCommand' solution, empowers healthcare providers to protect the safety of their patients, assets, and clinical workflows from cyber-attacks. 'MedCommand' provides clinical engineering and information security teams with a unified solution to manage and protect the entire connected HIoT environment including medical devices, enterprise IoT,
and operational technology.



The 'MedCommand' solution is built on Cylera’s 'CyberClinical' technology platform, which incorporates machine learning, behavioral analytics, data analysis, and virtualization techniques. Cylera has partnered with leading healthcare providers, experts, and peers to develop the most comprehensive and integrated HIoT security solution for healthcare.

Learn more about Cylera's innovative AI based approach to medical device and other HIoT endpoint management or contact us to schedule a conversation.

This blog was originally published here.


The Cybersecurity Skills Shortage


I read a great article this morning by Dr. Magda Chelly published in the Singapore Independent. The article discussed the cybersecurity skills shortage and the immediate need for more cyber professionals to fill existing job vacancies in Singapore.

The shortage of cybersecurity professionals is a global concern however, and Singapore is far from alone in its need for more qualified and experienced technical and managerial security professionals. The Cisco Annual Security Report has, for the past three years, highlighted a huge gap between demand for security professionals and the available supply, and that defenders are outnumbered five to one by attackers. Universities across the globe are struggling to adapt to changing demands from government and business in order to train the workforce of the future. A future where nearly everything will be conducted virtually via cyberspace and the inter-network of government agencies, businesses and individuals that power commerce, education and just about everything else. Securing that future will be critical for everyone.

Even in the United States where arguably there are more certified cyber professionals than any other country, a recent survey found 82,000 open positions requesting a CISSP yet at last count there were only 79,000 CISSP holders in the USA, nearly all of whom were already working at least one full time job. In fact, a recent study conducted by (ISC)2 found that cybersecurity workforce gap has increased to more than 2.9 million globally. The report goes on to state that of the 2.93 million overall gap, the Asia-Pacific region is experiencing the highest shortage, at 2.14 million, in part thanks to its growing economies and new cybersecurity and data privacy legislation being enacted throughout the region.

The (ISC)2 CISSP (Certified Information Systems Security Professional) is not the only cybersecurity certification however; GIAC Security Expert (GCE) and ISACA (Information Systems Audit and Control Association) certifications in security governance (CGEIT), security audit (CISA), information risk (CRISC) and security management (CISM) are equally prized. Most however require some level of experience putting potential candidates in a catch-22 position – you can’t get the certificate without experience; and you can’t get the security job in order to build the experience without the certificate. Maybe recruiters need to re-think this demand and look for broader skill sets and capabilities from entry or mid-level candidates!

That’s also one of the reasons why many people looking to enter the profession are completing university degrees in a cybersecurity related discipline. In fact, there are a heap of accredited universities today offering quality bachelors, masters and doctoral degrees, especially in the Australia and United States. Many of these are available entirely online and therefore accessible to Singaporeans, just as they are to residents of other countries who are willing and able to invest in the time and effort in their future. The nice thing about online degrees is that you can study at nights and weekends while holding down the current day job and salary, rather than take an unpaid sabbatical for 2 years or more to attend a bricks-and-mortar university as was the case just a few years ago.

A cybersecurity degree not only says a lot more about you as a candidate compared to someone who simply paid and took the CISSP or other exam, it also in many cases, will exempt you from the work experience requirement, thus opening the door for you to have both a degree and a professional qualification at the end of the day.

Unlike a professional qualification however, your cybersecurity degree will not expire if you forget or elect not to pay the annual club membership fees to the body issuing the certificate. Let’s not forget that these bodies have made a highly profitable business out of certifying cybersecurity professionals and each requires the payment of annual maintenance fees along with evidence of continuing education for you to keep your certification. A degree on the other hand is a qualification for life and will never expire.

So when should you embark upon an academic qualification like a cyber degree and when or who should just go for the CISSP or other professional certificate? The fact is, that depending on your age and experience, you will likely benefit from both. However, no qualification is a substitute for experience and that’s probably why it makes most sense for those in the profession with 5 to 10 years’ experience to get their CISSP or other professional qualification, and those entering security management to get their CISM. However, there’s nothing like a Masters or Doctoral degree to show a prospective employer that you really are an expert with deep cybersecurity and information assurance knowledge.


The profession needs more practitioners at all levels however and there are good rewards for those at the top of their game as I wrote about in a prior article discussing the role of the CISO or Chief Information Security Officer. A role which is quickly changing with the times.

My friend and fellow security evangelist Dr. Mansur Hasib from the University of Maryland University College has spoken extensively at numerous security conferences, as have I and many others, about the cybersecurity skills shortage. No matter where you are located, there is a drastic need for more entry-level security professionals, so if you are reading this while contemplating your future, this is one profession you should probably look at closely. With a 12x demand over supply for security professionals, a career in cybersecurity is not one about to go away any time in the near future. What’s more, where ever demand outstrips supply, professionals are usually going to be well paid and well looked after.

Warning – Highly Competitive Environment: Once established, you may be mildly harassed by recruiters wishing to hire you away from your current role for double the money to work somewhere else! (At least, for the immediate future.)

This blog is also posted on Linkedin