Securing Health Information Exchanges in a Modern Healthcare Network

3rd June 2014

Healthcare providers are migrating from large, independent stand alone organizations into complex new ecosystems. Today Provider Organizations, affiliated physician groups, labs and others are involved in both the provisioning of care, and the collection of vast amounts of information from patients. Health Information Exchanges are evolving and are a more affordable means to transfer clinical information and other data.

Healthcare as we know it is changing quickly. Healthcare providers will soon be required to provide communication and collaboration platforms that allow seamless integration among the various stakeholders. These changes in information flows, along with an explosion of digital content that needs to be stored and shared, are driving the need for a secure, flexible and scalable IT platform through which Providers, Payers and Health sciences can support collaboration and information exchange. The transition towards more patient-centric care and decentralized monitoring means providers, patients and payers need to access information that originates outside the hospital setting. The trends toward personalized medicine, prevention, and wellness means stakeholders need to connect information from various points within the healthcare value chain − including providers, laboratories, payers, and patients. The more this private information is opened to outside entities, the greater the chance that these systems can be compromised either intentionally or accidently.

Upcoming trends in a healthcare industries network
The major challenges to a healthcare provider’s network arises from the different business functions increasingly taking place in their network.

Allowing Patient and Provider Access to the Network

 

Increased Use of Clinical Informatics to Improve Workflow

Increasingly Stringent Compliance Mandates

Towards a secure health architecture
All the challenges mentioned above require disparate functionality. Healthcare service providers need to evaluate their security needs at each of the following levels:

Management Level
Given the widely distributed nature of modern healthcare establishments, the ability to quickly modify and manage security appliances is essential.

Aggregation Level
The aggregation level is the destination for all data. Typically this is the hospital datacentre. Core security functions such as firewalling, application control and VPN termination take place at this level.

Business Associate Level
The individual clinic, lab, doctor’s office, or any business associate requires security and connectivity for a wide variety of functions including WiFi, voice, and traditional network connectivity. With the addition of consumer connectivity, each associate much also be able to provide security functions such as antimalware and application control.

Access Level
As healthcare organizations extend access to providers using tablets and to patients using mobile devices, ensuring secure access is critical. The entire healthcare industry is undergoing a dramatic shift designed to enhance the level of care provided to patients. The sensitivity of patient information has created the need for end-to-end security solutions throughout the entire healthcare network – from doctor’s offices all the way to the hospital data centre.

Healthcare providers can no longer afford to take security lightly. Only with security as the foundation can healthcare organizations build IT services and applications that meet the requirements of the business and healthcare mandates.