The White House today released a  from Anne Neuberger, Deputy Assistant to President Biden, and Deputy National Security Advisor for Cyber and Emerging Technology, urging business executives to immediately convene their leadership teams to discuss ransomware threats and review corporate security posture and business continuity plans. The memo reiterates high-impact best practices for organizations to adopt: adoption of multi-factor authentication, endpoint detection and response, encryption and deploying skilled, empowered security teams. In addition, the AHA also recommends as high impact having network segmentation in place; tested, offline secure backups; incident response planning; and staff trained to recognize and report phishing emails.

鈥淲e are pleased to see the memo from the White House stressing the importance of some fundamental-but-essential cybersecurity measures which most hospitals and health systems already have in place 鈥 said John Riggi, AHA鈥檚 senior advisor for cybersecurity and risk. 鈥淔rom AHA鈥檚 perspective, equally important to stopping ransomware attacks is the tangible actions the government will take to, as they stated, 鈥榟old ransomware actors and the countries who harbor them accountable.鈥 We agree that neither the private sector nor the government can fight this battle alone. We also reiterate, as we did in our testimony before the Senate and our public statements, that defense is only half of the equation which provides the solution to this national security threat.鈥 

For more information on this or other cybersecurity and risk issues, contact Riggi at jriggi@aha.org.

Related News Articles

Chairperson's File
Public
Cybersecurity and physical threats are unfortunately significant enterprise risks for health care, regardless of size or location. Every hospital, physician鈥
Headline
The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency April 17 released guidance to reduce risks associated with a reported breach of Oracle cloud services.鈥
Headline
The National Counterintelligence and Security Center, the FBI, and the Defense Counterintelligence and Security Center yesterday released guidance on鈥
AHA Cyber Intel
While the rate of cyberattacks on hospitals has risen dramatically, the severity of the impacts has also grown exponentially. Let鈥檚 look at the state of cyber鈥
Headline
The House Energy and Commerce Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee April 1 discussed cybersecurity threats in legacy medical devices during a hearing. The鈥
Headline
The Trump Administration March 28 announced that it renewed for one year the public emergency for ongoing malicious cyber-enabled activities against the U.S.鈥