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Cyberattacks can cost APAC healthcare firms $23.3M

Healthcare organisations in Asia-Pacific can incur economic losses of up to US$23.3 million from cybersecurity incidents, though, 45 percent have either experienced or are not even sure if they have experienced a cyber attack.
Written by Eileen Yu, Senior Contributing Editor

Cyber attacks can cost Asia-Pacific healthcare organisations up to US$23.3 million in estimated economic losses, with 45 percent either experiencing or are not even sure if they have experienced a cybersecurity incident. In addition, just 18 percent among those that have experienced such threats have looked at establishing a cybersecurity strategy before rolling out a digital transformation project. In comparison, 33 percent of their peers that have not encountered such incidents considered a cybersecurity component before doing so.

The remaining 49 percent either looked at cybersecurity only after they had embarked on their digital transformation initiatives or did not even consider security at all, according to a study conducted by Frost & Sullivan and commissioned by Microsoft. The survey polled 1,300 respondents from 13 Asia-Pacific markets, including China, India, Singapore, and Australia, of which 11 percent were from the healthcare sector.  

It found that 42 percent of healthcare organisations adopted "a tactical view" of cybersecurity to safeguard the company against attacks, with 19 percent turning to cybersecurity as a business differentiator and digital transformation enabler. The lack of emphasis on security as an enabler resulted in their application of such tools as a "bolt-on", the study noted, adding that this could lead to cybersecurity risks and vulnerabilities as well as impede efforts to build a "secure-by-design" digital project. 

In the event of a cyber attack, a large healthcare organisation could incur an average of US$23.3 million in economic losses, while a mid-size company could lose an average US$17,000. Losses were assessed based on direct impact, such as loss in productivity and remediation cost, as well as indirect impact such as from customer churn arising from negative hits on brand reputation.

The biggest economic impact was from the loss of customers, while 60 percent of cyber attacks on healthcare companies in the past year had led to job losses across different functions. 

Web defacement and data exfiltration had the highest impact and often resulted in the slowest recovery time, the study revealed. It added that 50 percent of healthcare organisations running more than 50 cybersecurity tools took more than a day to recover from cybersecurity attacks, while 79 percent operating between 11 and 25 tools took less than an hour. 

In addition, 65 percent had pushed back their digital transformation efforts over concerns about cybersecurity.

Frost & Sullivan's industry principal of cybersecurity Kenny Yeo said: "With more and more healthcare organisations in Asia-Pacific moving beyond digitisation into transformation and rallying with innovation, building a strong foundation with security and compliance has become critical. Embedding security and privacy into all aspects of digital interactions is not an option anymore--it needs to be mandated, and even more so for healthcare organisations as they handle sensitive and confidential data."

Microsoft's Asia regional business lead for worldwide health Keren Priyadarshini concurred, noting that healthcare records were highly personal and sensitive, and security breaches could be detrimental to healthcare organisations. "If patients' records are stolen, their private data may be traded in the underground economy to be exploited by cybercriminals for scams and frauds and, worse still, it could cause tremendous trauma to the patients," Priyadarshini said. 

She added that a patient's safety and well-being was invariably tied to a healthcare organisation's ability to safeguard private and personal data. "When a medical institution is hit with a cyberattack such as ransomware, critical care treatment needed by patients can be delayed and non-emergency cases can be forcibly canceled as doctors are unable to access patient's medical information or the accuracy of the data becomes questionable as cybercriminals could have changed the data values," she said. 

Singapore's Ministry of Health last month revealed that personal information belonging to 14,200 individuals diagnosed with HIV had been leaked online and the data of another 2,400 people listed as part of a contact tracing process also had been exposed. Their name, identification number, contact details including phone and address, as well as HIV test results and related medical information had been leaked, the ministry said. 

In July 2018, personal data of 1.5 million SingHealth patients also was compromised in Singapore's most severe data breach, to date, and was found to be the result of misconfigured IT systems and IT staff that lacked cybersecurity awareness and resources.

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