Privacy & Security
Etay Maor, Cato Networks' chief security strategist, will demonstrate jailbreaking, prompt injections and other real-world attacks at a HIMSS25 session focused on the use of artificial intelligence in healthcare.
The chief digital and information officer discusses his to-do list for the year ahead. He offers thoughts on the trends that will shape 2025, including cybersecurity, AI and automation, and patient experience.
He discusses the particular cybersecurity challenges for post-acute care settings, and previews a HIMSS25 session that will help IT leaders at nursing homes, home health and assisted living groups can improve their privacy and security postures.
Targeted by cybersecurity threat actors, providers must take extra precautions to safeguard maternal health data and ensure that they have the right levels of security, says Deepak Prakash, CTO and cofounder of Sonio.
The chief information and digital strategy officer explains what achieving certification under the Joint Commission's Responsible Use of Health Data initiative means for Inova's privacy and security practices, and AI data governance.
A change in administration isn’t the only thing that promises an interesting year. Editors from Healthcare IT News, Healthcare Finance News and MobiHealthNews discuss what to look for in telehealth and RPM, and emerging policies in AI and cybersecurity.
Join the editors of Healthcare IT News, Healthcare Finance News and MobiHealthNews as they forecast new trends and developments for the year ahead: AI, cybersecurity, patient engagement, reimbursement and rev cycle, virtual care and more.
Chike Okeke, chief information security officer of data exchange company Concord, offers his perspective on the safe and secure transfer of protected health information.
Janice Reese, program manager of FAST (FHIR at Scale Task Force), says making patient access simpler is a key benefit, along with identity consent and security.
Lee Kim, senior principal for cybersecurity and privacy at HIMSS, says hospitals and health systems need to effectively make use of their whole cybersecurity staff, whether it's a team of 50, five – or even a single person.