Denise Anderson Cybersecurity Article in the 2024 Spring TribalHub digital magazine

The Evolution of Cybersecurity and Cyber Threats in Healthcare
Health-ISAC President and CEO, Denise Anderson wrote an article for Tribal ISAC Magazine detailing the timeline of cybersecurity and cyber events affecting the health sector. It covers the timeline of cyber threats to the health sector, including the following topics:
- – The Road to Hell is Paved with Good Intentions (2009 HITECH)
- – From Data Privacy to Operational Threats (2015-2016)
- – COVID-19 Brings a Focus on Healthcare (2020)
- – A Focus on Compliance vs. Security (2021)
- – Geopolitics and Healthcare: Nothing is Safe
- – Changing the Mindset: Invest Now Rather Than Pay Later
Read the 2024 Spring TribalHub digital magazine and see this article on pages 30-31
https://www.flipsnack.com/tribalhubnetwork/2024-spring-magazine/full-view.html
The threat landscape has changed dramatically over the space of twelve years. With threats ranging from data and IP theft to ransomware, supply chain, and DDoS attacks, healthcare security teams need to be ever mindful of the threats, threat actors, motivations, their firm’s attack surface, and the risk they are willing to accept. Joining an information-sharing organization such as an Information Sharing and Analysis Center (ISAC) is a great way to stay abreast of threats and learn from peers.
- 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%