The Homeland Security Systems Engineering and Development Institute, sponsored by the Department of Homeland Security and operated by MITRE, recently announced this year鈥檚 , which an attacker could use to control a system, steal data and prevent applications from working. The Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency organizations to review the report and recommended mitigations to determine those most suitable to adopt. 

鈥淭his very technical but very useful guide is essential for software developers and for the consumers who use their applications, such as hospitals and health systems,鈥 said John Riggi, AHA鈥檚 national advisor for cybersecurity and risk. 鈥淚t is clear that the vast majority of cyber risk and expenses related to cyber vulnerability management that hospitals and health systems incur are due to vulnerabilities in the third-party technologies we depend upon. Unfortunately, we as organizational and individual consumers have become accustomed to the fact that third-party technology is 鈥榠nsecure by default.鈥 We need to change that paradigm and no longer accept that precept as the norm, and demand that the technology we purchase, maintain and secure at great expense to our organizations be secure by design and default 鈥 as CISA Director Jen Easterly has so prominently . We simply can鈥檛 afford to continue to pay the 鈥榯echnology security tax.鈥欌

For more information on this or other cyber and risk issues, contact Riggi at jriggi@aha.org. For the latest cyber and risk resources and threat intelligence, visit aha.org/cybersecurity.

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