It’s no secret that the healthcare industry is a target for hackers, with hundreds of companies experiencing cybersecurity incidents each year. Before the Change Healthcare cyberattack and the CrowdStrike outage in 2024, there were major attacks at Anthem, CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield, and UCLA Health Systems about 10 years prior that had set the industry ablaze. The trend was a wake-up call for providers who were increasingly using electronic health records but perhaps didn’t incorporate enough protections to keep patient data safe online. Cyberattacks aren’t just invasive for patients—they’re also very costly. IBM reported last year, in fact, that healthcare data breaches cost an average of $9.8 million per incident. These attacks were a lesson for the entire industry in 2015, and experts spoke with Healthcare Brew about how the approach to cybersecurity shifted after. “The only thing that really moves the needle in cybersecurity is a high-profile attack,” Mark Stockley, a cybersecurity expert, said. Cyberattacks from 10 years ago look very different.—CM |