IoT Roadblocks in Healthcare: Cost, Security, and Data Integration

The solutions are tailored to address specific challenges, which can become expensive for any one organization.

from HealthcareITNews

The healthcare industry saw an 11 percent boost in Internet of Things network connections between 2016 and 2017, ranking last behind four other key industries – manufacturing (84 percent), energy/utilities (41 percent), transportation/distribution (40 percent), and smart cities/communities (19 percent), according to “The Verizon State of the Market: Internet of Things 2017” report.

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Disclaimer: The viewpoint expressed in this article is the opinion of the author and is not necessarily the viewpoint of the owners or employees at Healthcare Staffing Innovations, LLC.

Happy National Health IT Week!

October 2nd through 6th marks National Health IT Week and shines a spotlight on the value of health IT.

Monday, October 2nd, kicks off National Health IT Week, a nationwide awareness week developed by the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society and the Institute for e-Health Policy to shine a spotlight on how healthcare IT produces value, especially in relation to improved treatment and clinical care. Scores of conferences and other events, such as the Pop Health Forum in Chicago and Health 2.0 in Santa Clara, will be taking place nationwide, as well as online, with webinars scheduled throughout the week and the month of October, which is Cybersecurity Awareness Month.

For a full list of events happening around the country, please click here.

Can’t attend? Stay up to date on the happenings of National Health IT Week via #NHITWeek on Twitter.

Disclaimer: The viewpoint expressed in this article is the opinion of the author and is not necessarily the viewpoint of the owners or employees at Healthcare Staffing Innovations, LLC.

Health Care Information on the Cloud—or Anywhere. Is It Really Safe?

Why is it even on the cloud? If it is unsafe, can it be made safe? What can I, as a business owner or business manager, do about it?

by Jerry Adcock

The short answer is that all depends on the people that host the data, access the data, and that own the data. The long answer is a little more complicated. Why the concern, though? Why is it even on the cloud? If it is unsafe, can it be made safe? What can I, as a business owner or business manager, do about it? Those questions and more will be answered in a 3-part series.

First, why this is a concern? Health information contains an incredible amount of personal and confidential information. It typically contains the patient’s social security number, address, phone, email, insurance provider, and medical history including a detailed history of office visits, lab tests and prescriptions. This is a treasure trove of information. And it’s all kept in one place, along with thousands, tens of thousands, or even millions of other health records. With this kind of information, an identity thief can make a lot of money with very little effort. Additionally, with all this info in one place, it becomes a single point of failure.

That single point of failure is a huge concern for healthcare companies. An attack on that sensitive data might come through a poorly configured firewall, an email embedded with malware, like ransom ware, or through careless or even negligent employees accidentally browsing to a nefarious web site. That gold mine of information is then put at risk with one single entry point: perhaps an employee clicks on a link from Apple that states a purchase has been refunded to their account and ransomware is launched, encrypting their entire hard drive. The medical facility is then faced with a choice: take the chance that they can somehow quickly restore the integrity and availability of the data, or pay the ransom and avoid any potential litigation arising from not being able to access patient information.

But that begs another question: Why is our data even on the cloud? Shouldn’t it be in the hands of the medical facilities that own the data? Wouldn’t it be safer there? There are a lot of factors that have driven data to the cloud, but probably the two most significant are economy of scale, and cost.

With data in the cloud a medical facility can rapidly increase their computing power, storage, or ability to electronically service patents for a small monthly fee, instead of doling out thousands of dollars on new servers and the accompanying infrastructure. Flip a switch, metaphorically speaking, and the new systems are online. On-site IT staffing requirements can be reduced, instead of always trying to keep up with the latest and greatest software and hardware, that cost is largely offloaded to the hosting company. And with the right platform, patient data can also be mined for meaningful patterns to help predict trends and direct business decisions. Health information can be sanitized, stripping it of all personal identifiable information and then sold to a research college, research company, or a marketing company.

The data mining possibilities are staggering. Imagine local hospitals being able to pool their resources and react, within hours, to a significant health concern based on current and historical data. With much more primitive tools, this is exactly what Dr. John Snow did with Cholera in 1854 in London.

Does it not make sense why so much of our health information is computerized and why so much of the computerized data is kept in the cloud? Which brings us to our main question is it really safe on the cloud? More on that later.


Jerry Adcock is a freelance writer with 20 years of embedded systems engineering experience.

Disclaimer: The viewpoint expressed in this article is the opinion of the author and is not necessarily the viewpoint of the owners or employees at Healthcare Staffing Innovations, LLC.

What Data-driven Healthcare Orgs Have in Common

It’s up to the analytics team to break the C-suite out of its old ways and get them engaged in the data.

from HealthcareITNews

Though it can be difficult to quantify just when a health organization has embraced analytics, but you usually can tell when its executives are engaged with the data.

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Disclaimer: The viewpoint expressed in this article is the opinion of the author and is not necessarily the viewpoint of the owners or employees at Healthcare Staffing Innovations, LLC.

Too Many Healthcare Employees Would Share Sensitive Data

68% of employees at healthcare organizations would share sensitive, confidential, or regulated information under certain circumstances.

from Healthcare IT News

The most recent Dell End-User Security Survey has some found that three in four employees across all industries, including 68 percent of employees at healthcare organizations, would share sensitive, confidential or regulated information under certain circumstances. Some situations, such as being directed to do so by management (43 percent) or sharing with a person authorized to receive it (37 percent), would seem legitimate. But others, such as determining that the risk to their company is very low and the potential benefit of sharing information is high (23 percent), or feeling it will help themselves or the recipient do their jobs more effectively (22 percent and 13 percent respectively) play a bit looser with the rules.

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Disclaimer: The viewpoint expressed in this article is the opinion of the author and is not necessarily the viewpoint of the owners or employees at Healthcare Staffing Innovations, LLC.

5 Things Data Scientists Want Hospital Leaders to Know

Four data scientists discuss five data challenges they wish their healthcare partners understood.

from Becker’s Health IT & CIO Review

Before approaching high-level predictive or prescriptive analytics, successful healthcare organizations must lay the right groundwork. However, many organizations struggle with how to do so.

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Disclaimer: The viewpoint expressed in this article is the opinion of the author and is not necessarily the viewpoint of the owners or employees at Healthcare Staffing Innovations, LLC.

Patients Expect Doctors to Help Share Health Records with Other Providers

There’s a fundamental shift towards patients having more control of their data and more say in how those data move.

from Modern Healthcare

The push for interoperability comes not just from the government and vendors but from patients themselves, who want their data to easily move with them and who expect, sometimes incorrectly, that those data do indeed do that and that their providers help the process along.

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