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By Kat Jercich | 01:24 pm | August 06, 2021
The Data Aggregator Validation program is aimed at ensuring the validity of clinical data and saving provider organizations time and money.
By Bill Siwicki | 12:16 pm | August 06, 2021
An expert in AI-based healthcare staffing technology explains how e-commerce selling techniques can be used to more effectively manage staffing challenges.
By Bill Siwicki | 11:37 am | August 06, 2021
The 50-location urgent care provider also decreased chart completion time from 4-5 minutes to 45 seconds, a big plus for caregivers.
By Ahmed El Sherif | 10:21 am | August 06, 2021
News comes as the United Arab Emirates capital gets ready to introduce further restrictions of movement for non-vaccinated residents.
By Mike Miliard | 10:16 am | August 06, 2021
Patients at a dozen Intermountain hospitals across hundreds of miles can now access 24/7 virtual care from tele-nurses, tele-hospitalists and other remote monitoring technicians and clinicians.
By Sara Mageit | 09:46 am | August 06, 2021
Also, Cloud21 announces that it will be creating 50 jobs to support digital health services across the NHS. 
By Adam Ang | 06:03 am | August 06, 2021
The platform keeps a record of patients' daily food intake, treatments, prescriptions, and temperatures.
HIMSS21
By Nathan Eddy | 04:16 pm | August 05, 2021
Dr. Alan Lotvin, executive vice president of CVS Health, says it's time to focus more on technology-enabled medication adherence. He'll explain more at HIMSS21 next week.
By Kat Jercich | 03:43 pm | August 05, 2021
A study published this week in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association found that hospitals with low cybersecurity ratings were more likely to experience a data breach.   The research, which also compared hospital cybersecurity ratings with Fortune 1000 firms, found that health systems remain statistically more vulnerable to botnets, spam and malware.   "Recent hacking and ransomware attacks may be shifting the security landscape for hospitals, with much larger potential hospital and patient consequences," wrote University of Central Florida's Sung Choi and Vanderbilt University's M. Eric Johnson in the study.   "Ongoing risk assessment is needed to keep up with these threats and will likely require even further security investment," they added.   WHY IT MATTERS   First, Choi and Johnson compared longitudinal cybersecurity risk ratings from BitSight of 594 hospitals with the ratings of 971 Fortune 1000 firms over the course of five years. (A disclosure notes that Johnson served as an early-stage advisor to BitSight and holds unexpired options for his involvement with the firm from 2012 to 2013.)   They found that, overall, hospitals had significantly lower security ratings than the Fortune 1000 firms from 2014 to 2016 – but the gap narrowed over time.    By 2017 through the end of the study period in 2019, that difference was no longer statistically significant.   "The reduction in the gap in security rating suggests that healthcare providers are catching up to the general cybersecurity performance of large, publicly traded firms," read the study.   However, that catch-up has not been consistent across the board: When it comes to measures of vulnerability against botnets, spam and malware, hospitals have improved but are still lagging behind.   Choi and Johnson also compared the cybersecurity ratings of hospitals that had experienced a data breach with those that had not.   Perhaps unsurprisingly, hospitals with low security ratings were associated with significant risk of a data breach.   "Hospital executives should work to reduce risks related to both technical security controls such as updated software and security applications, along with human vulnerabilities that can be addressed through enhanced training and overall security culture," observed Choi and Johnson.   THE LARGER TREND   Although hospitals and health systems certainly aren't alone when it comes to being targeted – recent attacks on pipelines, meat processors and government agencies make that clear – the potential risk to patient care means their incidents often make major news.   Recently, Scripps Healthcare experienced a weeks-long network shutdown following a ransomware attack – only to then face a series of lawsuits from individuals saying the health system should have protected their data better.   ON THE RECORD   "Policy makers should monitor the risk to the healthcare sector and provide incentives for hospitals to invest in risk management and overall information security," said Choi and Johnson in the JAMIA study. Kat Jercich is senior editor of Healthcare IT News. Twitter: @kjercich Email: kjercich@himss.org Healthcare IT News is a HIMSS Media publication.