FDA Playbook on Medical Device Cybersecurity
Regional Incident Preparedness and Response Playbook
From the MITRE website:
The Medical Device Cybersecurity Regional Incident Preparedness and Response Playbookoutlines a framework for health delivery organizations (HDOs) and other stakeholders to plan for and respond to cybersecurity incidents around medical devices, ensure effectiveness of devices, and protect patient safety.
The healthcare sector knows how to prepare for and respond to natural disasters. It is less prepared, however, to handle cybersecurity incidents, particularly those involving medical devices. Recent global cyber attacks highlighted the need for more robust cybersecurity preparedness to execute an enhanced, effective, real-time response that enables continuity of clinical operations.
Using mobile devices to store, process, and transmit patient information has become increasingly popular amongst healthcare providers. When health information is compromised, organizations can face penalties and lose consumer trust, and patient care and safety may be at risk.
To address this challenge, cybersecurity experts at the NCCoE collaborated with the healthcare industry and technology vendors to develop an example solution to show healthcare providers how they can secure electronic health records on mobile devices. The solution is guided by standards and best practices from NIST and others, including the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) rules.
The playbook supplements existing HDO emergency management and/or incident response capabilities with regional preparedness and response recommendations for medical device cybersecurity incidents. The playbook outlines how hospitals and other HDOs can develop a cybersecurity preparedness and response framework, which starts with conducting device inventory and developing a baseline of medical device cybersecurity information.
Please send comments or suggestions about the Playbook to [email protected]
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FDA Playbook on Medical Device CybersecurityCybersecurity attacks on Healthcare and Public Health (HPH) critical infrastructure, such as healthcare delivery organizations (HDOs), are occurring with greater frequency. Disruptions in clinical care operations can put patients at risk. The global ransomware event known as WannaCry demonstrated how the performance of vulnerable medical devices may be compromised by an exploit, whether it intentionally targets the healthcare system or is purely opportunistic. Similarly, other attacks such as Pe