Current and Emerging Healthcare Cyber Threat Landscape: Executive Summary for CISOs

Actionable cybersecurity market trends that leadership can use for strategic decision-making.
This report is a collaboration between Health-ISAC and the American Hospital Association (AHA.)
“Proud to release Health-ISAC‘s third annual threat report. This year’s executive summary is targeted for CISOs and contains new content including a cybersecurity product market trend analysis,” says Errol Weiss, Health-ISAC Chief Security Officer.
This executive summary is intended to give Board of Directors, Chief Information Security Officers, Chief Security Officers, and cybersecurity and physical security executives in healthcare an overview of threat trends to improve their understanding of, and ability to protect against, the current and projected threat landscape. The report also includes cybersecurity market trends that leadership can use for strategic decision-making.
The Executive Summary Report here is a condensed version of a more comprehensive report created by analysts from Health-ISAC and is based on experiences provided by Health-ISAC member organizations, threat intelligence providers, open-source research, and interviews conducted with key leaders in the sector to give the most diverse and experienced perspective possible.
Read the downloadable PDF
- Related Resources & News
- Potential Terror Threat Targeted at Health Sector – AHA & Health-ISAC Joint Threat Bulletin
- New Cybersecurity Policies Could Protect Patient Health Data
- CyberWire Podcast: PHP flaw sparks global attack wave
- Health-ISAC Hacking Healthcare 3-14-2025
- HSCC Aiming to Identify Healthcare Workflow Chokepoints
- New Healthcare Security Benchmark Highlights Key Investment Priorities and Risks
- Are Efforts to Help Secure Rural Hospitals Doing Any Good?
- CISA cuts $10 million annually from ISAC funding for states amid wider cyber cuts
- 2024 Health-ISAC Discussion Based Exercise Series After-Action Report
- Cobalt Strike takedown effort cuts cracked versions by 80%