A solid password today keeps the hackers away

https://blog.aicpa.org/2019/05/a-solid-password-today-keeps-the-hackers-away.html#sthash.Dz5ZMLNV.dpbs

Image result for solid password

With identify theft becoming one of the world’s fastest growing crimes, days like World Password Day are crucial to raising awareness of online threats. I sat down with Jay Overcash, Director of IT Security Strategy, to talk about how people can protect themselves from hackers.

Why is a day like World Password Day so important?

As more and more of our lives move into the digital realm, we rely on authentication to protect our valuable online data and assets.  Usernames and passwords remain the predominant method for securing online data.  World Password Day is important as it draws attention to the need to adequately protect online data with a strong password.

While today is World Password Day, how often should we evaluate our passwords and consider changing them?

Everyone should evaluate their passwords and consider changing them as least once per year.  If you use the same password on multiple websites, then you should consider changing the password more frequently; however, the best advice is to have a unique password per website and application.

What are some best practices when creating or changing a password?

Current guidance by the National Institute of Standards and Technology recommends creating an easy-to-remember password that is long and composed of a series of unrelated words.  The minimum recommended password length depends on the sensitivity of the data being protected but it is generally agreed that 8 characters should be the minimum length. 

An example of an easy-to-remember password composed of unrelated words is redfootballthreebutterflies.  This password does not use any numbers or symbols and is easier for the end user to remember.  From a security perspective, the length of 27 characters is exponentially more difficult for a machine to crack, and the unrelated words make it extremely difficult to guess.  Even with this long, much more secure password, individuals should change their passwords at least once per year.

How else can people protect themselves online besides staying aware of passwords?

In general, people should always use anti-virus software and not click on links or attachments in emails that appear suspicious.  Additionally, users should only download files from trusted websites. One optional item to keep users’ accounts safe is enabling multi-factor authentication (MFA) on their accounts.  MFA, also referred to as two-step verification, provides a second method for verifying authentication for accounts usually via text message or email notification.  Enabling MFA will greatly improve the security of your accounts online.

Given that today is World Password Day, it’s the perfect time to take the pledge to #LayerUp. Add multi-factor authentication and evaluate your current passwords. It could save you a lot of trouble in the future.

 

CYBERSECURITY IS TOP ISSUE FOR HOSPITAL IT PROFESSIONALS, CREATING NEW WORKFORCE DYNAMICS

https://www.healthleadersmedia.com/innovation/cybersecurity-top-issue-hospital-it-professionals-creating-new-workforce-dynamics?utm_source=silverpop&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=ENL_190220_LDR_BRIEFING_resend%20(1)&spMailingID=15165362&spUserID=MTY3ODg4NjY1MzYzS0&spJobID=1581568052&spReportId=MTU4MTU2ODA1MgS2

Cybersecurity is top issue for hospital IT professionals

HIMSS survey suggests focus on other IT priorities may lag; influence of security leaders may cause tension.

Cybersecurity, privacy, and security are creating such pressing issues for hospitals, other technology projects may be waylaid and discord among IT leadership could occur if the emerging influence of security professionals is not handled properly, according to the 2019 HIMSS U.S. Leadership and Workforce Survey.

The annual study included feedback from 269 U.S. health information and technology leaders between November 2018‒January 2019. The 30th edition of the survey examines trends and provides insights into the rapidly changing market for healthcare and IT professionals.

Among the key takeaways for hospitals:

  • The emergence of information security leaders as the third influential member of hospital IT leadership teams—following CIOs and senior clinical IT leaders—may create tensions for some organizations.
  • The top issue for hospital IT leaders is cybersecurity, privacy, and security.
  • The focus on security is so predominant, authors of the study suggest that other technological priorities may be put on the back burner.

Information about trends and issues for vendors and non-acute care facilities are also addressed in the full report.

ROLE OF SECURITY LEADERS EXPANDS

The study examines employment trends for specific job titles and, in some cases, compares rates to the prior year. Information security leaders continue to expand their presence in hospitals.

While employment of CIOs and senior clinical IT leaders remains fairly steady; employment of senior information security leaders at hospitals rose by 14% between 2018 and 2019. The study also documents how many hospitals employ professionals for other emerging technology leadership roles, such as chief technology, innovation, and transformation officers, but does not provide comparisons to previous years.

Hospital employment of IT leaders in the following positions for 2019 includes:

  • Chief Information Officer 84% (-3% compared to 2018)
  • A senior clinical IT leader (CMIO, CNIO, CHIO) 68% (+1% compared to 2018) 
  • A senior information security leader (CISO) 56% (+14% compared to 2018)
  • Chief Technology Officer 36%*
  • Chief Innovation Officer 19%*
  • Chief Transformation Officer  7%*
  • None of the above  9%*

“The emergence of a third leader overseeing a hospital’s information and technology efforts is bound to result in internal tensions as competing interests and overlapping jurisdictions present themselves,” says Lorren Pettit, MS, MBA, vice president at HIMSS in a news release. “These challenges have the potential to stymy a hospital’s progression if hospital leaders are not careful to manage these hurdles effectively.”

The report further elaborates that unless roles and responsibilities are clearly delineated, the influence of security professionals could impede a hospital’s progression on information and technology priorities as leaders “work through internal territorial challenges.”

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY PRIORITIES

The survey gauges interest from IT professionals about 24 topics. While cybersecurity outranked all other responses, “improving quality outcomes” and “clinical informatics and clinician engagement” also was highly rated for hospital respondents. Telehealth ranked ninth; innovation took the twenty-first spot.

Survey participants ranked these topics on a scale of one (not a priority) to seven (essential priority). Following are the ranking and mean scores for hospital respondents:

  1. Cybersecurity, Privacy, and Security 5.81
  2. Improving Quality Outcomes Through Health Information and Technology 5.28
  3. Clinical Informatics and Clinician Engagement  5.24
  4. Process Improvement, Workflow, Change Management 5.03
  5. Culture of Care and Care Coordination 4.92
  6. Data Science/Analytics/Clinical and Business Intelligence 4.91
  7. Leadership, Governance, Strategic Planning 4.90
  8. User Experience, Usability and User-Centered Design  4.86
  9. Telehealth 4.82
  10. Consumer/Patient Engagement & Digital/Connected Health 4.80
  11. Population Health Management and Public Health 4.77
  12. Safe Info and Tech Practices for Patient Care 4.62
  13. HIE, Interoperability, Data Integration and Standards 4.62
  14. Public Policy, Reporting, and Risk Management 4.31
  15. Healthcare App and Tech Enabling Care Delivery  4.20
  16. Social, Psychosocial & Behavioral Determinants of Health 4.06
  17. Consumerization of Health 3.75
  18. Clinically Integrated Supply Chain 3.66
  19. Healthy Aging and Technology  3.60
  20. Health Informatics Education, Career Development & Diversity  3.53
  21. Innovation, Entrepreneurship and Venture Investment 3.47
  22. Precision Medicine/Genomics  3.47
  23. Disruptive Care Models 3.39
  24. Grand Societal Challenges 2.88

SECURITY NEEDS MAY SLOW DOWN FOCUS ON OTHER IT PRIORITIES

Study authors characterized the prioritization of cybersecurity, privacy, and security by providers as “remarkably higher” than the next highest priority. The focus is so predominant, the authors suggest that other technological priories may be put on the back burner.

“Of the array of priorities presented respondents, ‘cybersecurity, privacy, and security’ was one of the only ‘defensive’ business tactics respondents were asked to consider,” states the report. “That providers (especially hospital respondents) responded so passionately to this priority suggests a growing number of provider organizations realize the need to protect existing business practices before aggressively pursuing other information and technology issues. If true, then there are potential downstream implications for the market as other information and technology priorities considered in this study may be put on hold or ‘slow walked’ until the security concerns of organizations are settled.”

In addition to this survey, HIMSS also released a related report last week, the 2019 HIMSS Cybersecurity Survey, which sheds additional light on some of these issues. Among the highlights:

  • A pattern of cybersecurity threats and experiences is discernable across U.S. healthcare organizations. Significant security incidents are a near universal experience with many of the initiated by bad actors, leveraging e-mail as a means to compromise the integrity of their targets.
  • Many positive advances are occurring in healthcare cybersecurity practices and healthcare organizations appear to be allocating more of their IT budgets to cybersecurity.
  • Complacency with cybersecurity practices can put cybersecurity programs at risk.
  • Notable cybersecurity gaps exist in key areas of the healthcare ecosystem. The lack of phishing tests in certain organizations and the pervasiveness provides insight into what healthcare organizations are doing to protect their information and assets, in light of increasing cyber-attacks and compromises impacting the healthcare and public health sector.

 

 

 

Cerner, Epic, McKesson Among Top 5 Global Health IT Vendors

https://ehrintelligence.com/news/cerner-epic-mckesson-among-top-5-global-health-it-vendors?elqTrackId=893d096a291d4cf5b90e75c601c7c5a1&elq=ff9dcb339dd14c5e807c6af05a723d2f&elqaid=2665&elqat=1&elqCampaignId=2463

EHR Vendors

IDC ranks Cerner, Epic, and McKesson Technology Solutions among the top 5 largest health IT vendors to healthcare payers and provider institutions.

The winners of the IDC Health Insights 2017 HealthTech Rankings released this week named Cerner, McKesson, and Epic Systems among the leading global health IT suppliers.

IDC Health Insights supplied the rankings indicating new benchmarks for health IT hardware, software, and services vendors.

Among the top five largest health IT companies worldwide are Cerner, Epic, and McKesson. This list is the second annual global revenue ranking by IDC Health.

The 2017 HealthTech Rankings comprise the following two lists:

  • The Top 50 features the largest companies that derive more than one third of their revenue from healthcare payer and/or provider institutions. The largest of the Top 50 companies is Optum, a subsidiary of UnitedHealth Group.
  • The Enterprise Top 25 features the largest companies that derive less than one third of their revenues from healthcare payer and/or provider institutions. The largest of the Enterprise Top 25 companies is IBM.

Cerner was listed as the second largest vendor in the HealthTech Top 50.

GE Healthcare ranked third, McKesson Technology Solutions came in fourth, and Epic Systems ranked as the fifth largest health IT vendor to healthcare payers and providers worldwide.

“IDC Health Insights is excited to release the second annual HealthTech Rankings,” said Research Vice President for IDC Health Insights Lynne Dunbrack. “These global revenue rankings offer a valuable industry benchmark of the leading global technology and service suppliers within the healthcare payer and provider services industry.”

The top five largest vendors listed in the HealthTech Enterprise Top 25 in descending order were IBM, Royal Philips, Siemens, Intel, and Microsoft.

A recent KLAS global EHR market share report similarly named Epic and Cerner among the EHR companies enjoying the highest level of worldwide success across the industry in 2016.

While Cerner maintained its hold as a top contendor, Epic Systems and InterSystems gained more clients than any other EHR vendor last year due in part to the technologies’ vast scope of functionalities and usability.

Epic and InterSystems both boast a wide array of functionalities and user-friendly technologies, but InterSystems won more contracts last year due to its more affordably priced product packages.

However, Epic contracted 8,190 beds in 2016—3,000 more than the next closest competitor.

While Cerner was less lucrative abroad in 2016 than it has been in years past, the vendor still earned the majority of the market share in foreign markets including the Middle East.

The recent spike in contracts for EHR vendors both within the US and abroad are indicative of the widespread adoption of EHR technology in healthcare systems around the globe.

Chris Van Gorder on the changing face of healthcare

Image result for Chris Van Gorder on the changing face of healthcare

Scripps Health CEO discusses the changing face of healthcare and his hope for the future.

Four predictions for the future of healthcare

http://managedhealthcareexecutive.modernmedicine.com/managed-healthcare-executive/news/four-predictions-future-healthcare?cfcache=true&ampGUID=A13E56ED-9529-4BD1-98E9-318F5373C18F&rememberme=1&ts=12082016

Healthcare policy has long been a moving target, but it’s hard to remember a time when more change was cycling through the industry. Now, more than half a decade since the passing of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), the focus has shifted from expanding access to health insurance to reforming the delivery of healthcare.

In particular, policymakers have embarked on a series of experiments and initiatives to transition from the traditional fee-for-service (FFS) system to a payment-for-value delivery system, with key attention to cost containment and quality improvement.

We are in the first generation of pursuing approaches better than FFS, and expect the industry’s shift toward value-based care (VBC) to accelerate and continue to impact providers, patients, vendors, and payers in different ways.

Now a little more than halfway through 2016, we thought it would be a good time to look at trends in the industry and how they will shape the relationships among stakeholders for the years to come.

50 things to know about Epic and Judy Faulkner

http://www.beckershospitalreview.com/healthcare-information-technology/50-things-to-know-about-epic-and-judy-faulknerjan-27.html

With roots dating back to 1979, Epic Systems has become a major player in the health IT world.

The vendor has achieved this status without going public, and without significant marketing efforts.

Epic is one of the biggest EHR providers for hospitals and health systems nationwide. As of March 2015, it was the third most commonly used EHR among hospitals and health systems participating in meaningful use, according to data from CMS. Additionally, a September KLAS report found Epic was one of just two vendors that did not lose any clients in 2014 (athenahealth was the other).

Here are 50 things to know about Epic Systems and the woman behind it all.

Soon-Shiong’s NantHealth files $92M IPO

http://www.healthcaredive.com/news/soon-shiongs-nanthealth-files-92m-ipo/418877/

NantHealth, a personalized medicine and IT company founded by Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong, has filed for a $92 million initial public offering (IPO).

Hospital execs: ACA, population health will be game changers in next three years

http://www.fiercehealthcare.com/story/hospital-execs-aca-population-health-will-be-game-changers-next-three-years/2016-04-15?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal&mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiTURjNU56QmxORGd4WmpoaiIsInQiOiJtZkFGUkQ1UVlcL3RZR3pPa0dFQ3E0c2xrczBBdVdYVDNZa1JkSzV5ZVRzOWc2NjBPdlNnVUpLbHhUbUNybkVibmlSU2d0K2NZVTBXeTBDQzUzM2pVZUo2aDBwR0E0MGdJNGJFYk5BQWZCSVk9In0%3D

C-suite leaders say innovative care delivery, post-acute care networks key areas of focus

Spring 2016 C-Suite Survey

Click to access EOSpring16Survey_HandoutFNL-1.pdf

Economic Outlook

Cain Brothers’ 2016 Healthcare Industry Outlook

https://gallery.mailchimp.com/d610d4deb64a452522c5c8e05/files/Vol_79_2016_Outlook_02.pdf?utm_source=Website+Registrants&utm_campaign=2144f72c2b-Strategies_79_2016_Healthcare_Outlook_1_6_2016&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_a68ce3feac-2144f72c2b-161042609

a84a4-leadershipjacobson2b28229