biospectrumasiaSeptember 16, 2019
Tag: APAC , cyber security risk , medical devices
More than two years after the infamous Wannacry ransomware crippled medical facilities and other organisations worldwide, the healthcare sector seems to be learning their lessons as Kaspersky reveals a decreased number of medical devices attacked in 2019.
Statistics from the global cyber security company showed that from 30% of hospital devices infected in 2017, medical organizations have witnessed only 28% of attacks in 2018, and almost one-third lesser for the current year at 19%.
Kaspersky, however, warns that the decline in number of attacks against devices in healthcare facilities is not observed everywhere. More than seven-in-10 medical machines in Venezuela (77%), the Philippines (76%), Libya (75), and Argentina (73%) are still being subjected to web attacks based on the company’s freshest data.
Two more countries in the Asia Pacific region were in the Top 15 nations with the most number of detected infections. These include Bangladesh logging 58% of attacked devices and Thailand with 44%.
The numbers were derived after Kaspersky researchers divided the number of devices in medical organisations in the countries with Kaspersky solutions by the number of devices where malicious codes were detected. Medical devices include all servers, computers, mobiles and tablets, IoT gadgets, and hospital machines that are connected to the internet inside a healthcare facility.
"In as much as we want to believe that everybody was awakened by the damage brought about by the Wannacry attack, the reality is that some countries are still lagging behind securing their medical devices. One factor we observe is that the chances of being attacked really depend on how much money the government spends on cybersecurity in the public health sector. Another key reason is the low level of cybersecurity awareness the people inside medical facilities have," comments Yury Namestnikov, Head of Global Research and Analysis Team (GReAT) Russia at Kaspersky.
A Kaspersky survey in healthcare sector in US and Canada uncovered that nearly a third of all respondents (32%) said that they had never received any cybersecurity training from their workplace. There is also one-in-10 employees in management positions which admitted that they were not aware of a cybersecurity policy in their organisations.
In terms of the loopholes cybercriminals use to infect hospitals and medical facilities, Namestnikov noted that outdated Microsoft office accounts to 59% of all exploit attacks in 2019. It is followed by EternalBlue (32%), which is related to Wannacry, as well as Android devices (2%) which are gaining increased access in medical networks.
"Medical infrastructure has a lot of devices, some of them portable, most of them are becoming more and more connected to the internet. There’s even a technology being developed which will soon allow doctors to do surgeries remotely. We’re definitely entering the era of the ultra-connected medicine. And I have to say that, while we welcome these advancements, we cannot deny that these will open wider doors for cybercriminals. This is a truth the healthcare sector should take into consideration, seriously," adds Namestnikov.
Acknowledging the serious threat cybercriminals can do against healthcare, Kaspersky suggests medical facilities to:
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