2. Why Do You Need Security Awareness
Training in Healthcare?
Security and privacy cut across a number
of legal frameworks within the USA. There is a good deal of general legislation
and guidelines that cover data protection and privacy and some that are more
focused on healthcare. The USA has a mosaic approach to data protection with no
overarching federal law to cover the security issues surrounding personal
information. There are two main areas of healthcare legislation that cover the
protection of personal data or protected health information (PHI): the Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPPA), and Health Information
Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH). The two acts work in
unison to cover the security expectations of the whole healthcare eco-system,
extending outwards to healthcare providers business associates. Together, the
acts set requirements to disclose data breaches, which are:
HIPAA Breach Notification Rule, 45 CFR
§§ 164.400-414: The rule requires that any breach of PHI must be disclosed to
both patients and the government (breach meaning unauthorized data being used
or disclosed). There are some nuances around the formal classification of a
breach, but with the introduction of the HIPPA “omnibus rule,” which requires a
risk assessment to set a breach as “low probability” for exposure, the chances
are you have to declare the breach.
HITECH, Section 13407 is
enforced by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). The act allows the data
protection rules to be extended to all entities not specifically covered by
HIPPA: for example, extended business associates of healthcare providers,
business associates being anyone, such as contractors and sub-contractors who
are involved in any health-related data handling.
Security awareness in healthcare cuts
across many layers. As well as the legislative drivers that demand security
awareness, a healthcare team approach to security is driven by:
Ethics: Healthcare has by definition a layer of ethics attached
to the practice. Healthcare data and in particular PHI are part of the ethical
layer that all of us expect to be respected. We all, at some point, share
health information with medical practitioners, so there is a personal element
to the ethics of data protection as well as an organizational benefit.
Risky behavior is very common: A study by Cisco found
that risky security behavior was almost the norm in an organization, with many
respondents admitting to putting data at risk at work. Improvement of behavior
towards security as an issue is a key selling point, especially to C-level
executives who need to oversee a company-wide security strategy.
Benefits of security awareness: The whole organization and
individuals benefit from being security-aware. Individuals workers can “do
their bit” by thwarting cyber-attacks. As cyber-threats against healthcare
become more prevalent, the inclusion of all into the security equation is ever
more important.
The climate of
increasing threats against healthcare coupled with the need for legislative
compliance makes healthcare a key industry for security awareness training.
Creating an educated workforce that understands the implications of
cyber-security on them and the industry is part of the overall healthcare
security strategy. This is only compounded by the human element present in the
most successful security threats, which are based on social engineering, e.g.,
phishing.