banner Expire 1 October 2024
Ad Ends 13 October 2024
banner Expire 15 January 2025
Ad Ends 13 October 2024
banner Expire 18 October 2024
banner Expire 16 November 2024
ad expire at 08 november 2024
What's new
banner Expire 16 November 2024
Ad Ends 20 January 2025
banner Expire 11 November 2024
Adv exp on 11 NOv 2024
ad End 18 October 2024
Ad expire at 5 August 2024
banner Expire 20 October 2024
Western union transfer
UniCvv
casino
swipe store
adv exp at 23 August 2024
Carding.pw carding forum
BidenCash Shop
Kfc CLub

Breaches Cost US Healthcare Organizations $13bn in 2020

File_closed07

TRUSTED VERIFIED SELLER
Staff member
Joined
Jun 13, 2020
Messages
7,240
Reaction score
914
Points
212
Awards
2
  • trusted user
  • Rich User
Last year saw a double-digit surge in the volume of healthcare data breach incidents in the US, with over 26 million people affected, according to Bitglass.

The cloud security firm’s seventh annual Healthcare Breach Report was compiled from US Department of Health and Human Services records of breached protected health information (PHI).

It revealed that incidents increased by over 55% on 2019 figures to reach 599 breaches in the sector, impacting over 26.4 million people.

The vast majority (67%) were down to “hacking and IT incidents” stemming from external attackers. This category also accounted for larger breaches than the others, amounting to over 91% of compromised records.

Loss or theft of endpoint devices came next, accounting for over 584,000 individuals affected, followed by unauthorized disclosure of data by internal parties or systems (763,000). The “other” category of miscellaneous breaches and leaks impacted over 584,000 patients.

Although the number of victims dropped slightly from the 27.5 million recorded in 2019, the average cost per breached record increased from $429 to $499 over the period. That means healthcare organizations were on the hook for $13.2bn as a result of breaches last year. The sector also comes top of IBM's Cost of a Data Breach list, with an average of over $7.1m per breach.

“The vast majority of healthcare organizations process and store protected health information (PHI) such as Social Security numbers, medical history and other personal data. It is no surprise that these entities would be targeted by malicious cyber-criminals seeking to access sensitive data for monetary gain,” said Anurag Kahol, CTO of Bitglass.

“The exceedingly high number of hacking and IT incidents highlight the shifting strategies of malicious actors. As healthcare organizations continue to embrace cloud migration and digital transformation, they must leverage the proper tools and strategies to successfully protect patient records and respond to the growing volume of threats to their IT ecosystems.”

Healthcare organizations across the US and beyond have also had to contend with a surge in ransomware attacks, many of them also stealing sensitive data, as cyber-criminals sensed that hospitals would be distracted by the fight against COVID-19.
 
Ad End 1 October 2024
Top