Hospitals are at a high risk of cyberattacks, but patients don't realize it:
Information technology experts are worried about increasing rates of ransomware attacks on healthcare organizations. Most patients, though, don't know they're happening, according to a new survey.
Southern Ohio Medical Center, a not-for-profit hospital in Portsmouth, Ohio, canceled appointments for today and is diverting ambulances after it was hit by a cyberattack on Thursday. It's part of a series of escalating attacks on healthcare organizations in the past two years — a trend that could have serious consequences for patient care.
But while information technology experts are well aware that the risk of cyberattacks that compromise patient data and shut down computer systems is on the rise, patients don't seem to be, according to a new report by cybersecurity company Armis. In fact, over 60 percent of people in the general public surveyed in the new report said they hadn't heard of any cyberattacks in healthcare in the past two years.
That's despite a doubling of cyberattacks on healthcare institutions in 2020, high-profile incidents like the attack on hospital chain Universal Health Services, and a major threat from groups using the ransomware Ryuk. The magnitude of attacks during the COVID-19 pandemic shocked experts, who said that ransomware gangs were targeting hospitals more aggressively than they had before. Unlike attacks on banks or schools, which are also common, these attacks have the potential to directly injure people.
(Score: 1, Redundant) by VLM on Wednesday November 17 2021, @09:26PM
Similar to other recent famous virus reporting (LOL), if you only got 5 new cases to drum up propaganda about, you report the percentage increased by 500% to increase fear. Noticed the report of go language related hospital cyberattacks went up by a very suspiciously even numbered percentage 500% in the linked article, and I'd bet money that means it went from 1 lifetime case to 6 lifetime cases.
That's why 60% haven't heard of anything, there's relatively speaking nothing to report LOL.