IoMT technology

How to secure the IoMT?

The IoMT security is of extreme relevance when it comes to the Healthcare and life sciences industry.

According to HealthITSecurity, 34% of healthcare organizations globally reported being hit by IoT ransomware through November 2020, and the sector has seen a 45% increase since then. Also, according to the IoT Security Report 2021, 71% of IT decision-makers in the survey consider the IoT “not very secure”. In these circumstances is relevant to say that for small vulnerabilities there are big consequences. A single exposure in an IoT device can have far-reaching consequences: Attackers can exploit the flaw to access the company’s system from where they can temporarily or permanently shut down the entire network. However, cybercriminals frequently seek to collect ransom money with this, as was the case at the University Hospital in Düsseldorf in the fall of 2020.

For avoiding such increasing attacks on your business, you can take into consideration the following factors to secure the IoMT:

First, you need a wholly profiled, dynamically risk-scored inventory of all managed and uncontrolled endpoints. Clearly, visibility entails tracking each device’s security posture, network status, location, and device consumption. On a per-asset basis, this may imply as many as 100 unique and generic identities, supplemented by photos, maps, Manufacturer Disclosure Statements for Medical Device Security (MDS2s), and other specialized descriptions. Because detecting unlawful asset activity requires extensive knowledge of allowed behavior, each device type’s operational needs and processes must be factored into profile information. This is what comprehensive visibility entails.

To know more about the cybersecurity of medical devices, go visit IoMT and Medical Device Cybersecurity

Afterward, make the relevant cuts of the right data instantly available to the suitable systems and workflows is referred to as data orchestration. There needs to be this orchestrated visibility to make the underlying processes continuous. This way, departments can share the same information referenced by cross-functional workflows, and the outcomes can be synchronized.

 The next step is considering endpoint detection and response (EDR). Connected health demands security policies that adapt to care delivery, regardless of location, rather than the other way around. Security must facilitate rather than limit. CrowdStrike has spent the previous decade building EDR capabilities by providing network visibility and telemetry from all workloads. Combining this data with network and endpoint information enables users to determine which information is critical, when it is critical, and where it is vital. CrowdStrike’s 2021 Global Threat Report review of Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVEs) (https://www.crowdstrike.com/resources/reports/global-threat-report-latam/) affecting IoT devices in the healthcare business identifies the following CVEs as the most serious: BlueKeep, DejaBlue, Netlogon.

Another factor for making sure you are securing your IoMT is data-in-transit encryption. The IoMT sends electronic protected health information (ePHI) to a linked application. A linked insulin pump, for example, sends data to the app, allowing the patient and clinician to keep track of glucose levels. The application, however, is connected to the public internet.

At the network level, data-in-transit encryption decreases the effect of eavesdropping and man-in-the-middle attacks. Without the necessary decryption technology, encryption scrambles data, rendering it unintelligible. Even if bad actors gained access to the network, they would not be able to access the data. 

By addressing these long-standing data gaps and incorporating capabilities that directly deal with the realities of current threats, the performance of existing infrastructure may be greatly enhanced. However, to the IoMT extent, there are several areas of risk regarding security; therefore, health delivery organizations must find ways to control damage and rationalize recovery costs. 

About ITJ

ITJ is a trusted partner in building the finest software engineering teams in the Americas. For more information, visit www.itj.com.

New CoE in Tijuana

A new Software Center of Excellence settles in Tijuana, Mexico

Tijuana is once again honored with opening a new Center of Excellence in Tijuana’s bustling Zona Río. The new facilities that will welcome a market-leading medical device organization that focuses on the continuous development of its IoMT mobile and cloud-based software platform for insulin delivery and monitoring offer an energizing collaborative workspace filled with local flare. The space is equipped to host 140 full-time staff members with another 100 co-working stations for visitors and our growing hybrid team located across Mexico.

In recent years, San Diego and Tijuana have been in the eye of innovation and technological forecasters, including the Montreal-based World Design Organization. Recently the region has been chosen as the World Design Capital for 2024, beating Moscow. The award recognizes the region’s leadership in design across economic, technological, and cultural sectors. Two countries mean more room to grow and prosper. 

For companies creating revolutionary IoMT smart medical processes and devices, Tijuana has become a key partner that helps accomplish the IoMT company’s strategic goal of confidently and cost-effectively enhancing its highly skilled digital engineering capabilities without sacrificing quality and productivity. 

The nearshore approach encourages growth in many ways, allowing companies to establish world-class software engineering centers of excellence. With the help of the right partner, more organizations are currently flourishing with the right experts. 

To know more about the potential and fast-developing innovation hub Tijuana is, you can visit Tijuana Leads Innovation with Borderless Business Congress.

Top 3 technology trends for 2022 ITJ

Top 3 Technology Trends for 2022

What Does the Future hold for Technology? For CIOs and IT leaders, the top strategic technology trends for 2022 will advance digital capabilities and drive success by addressing common business concerns. In addition, they provide a blueprint for distinguishing your company from competitors, achieving business goals, and establishing CIOs and IT executives as strategic partners.

So here are the top 3 technology trends for 2022:

1. Cybersecurity Mesh 

Although cybersecurity mesh has generated a lot of noise over the last decade, it remains one of the hottest new technology trends due to its significant impact on how we live and work. 

Cybersecurity mesh is a flexible, modular design that connects various security services that are widely spread. It also enables best-of-breed, stand-alone security solutions to collaborate to boost overall security while bringing control points closer to the assets meant to safeguard. Furthermore, it can validate identity, context, and policy adherence in the cloud and non-cloud contexts rapidly and reliably. 

The priorities of security and risk leaders focus specifically on privacy legislation, ransomware attacks, cyber-physical systems, and board-level scrutiny.

For more cybersecurity information oriented to IoMT, you can read IoMT and Medical Device Cybersecurity.

2. Cloud-Native Platforms 

Cloud-native platforms are technologies that enable you to create new application architectures that are robust, elastic, and agile, allowing you to react quickly to digital change. Cloud-native solutions improve the typical lift-and-shift approach to the cloud, which misses out on the benefits of cloud and complicates maintenance. 

As the internet becomes more widely used, cloud computing rises to the fore to assist businesses in disrupting the traditional IT delivery paradigm. Third parties can supply various software tools and enterprise IT resources over the internet, allowing the transition from physical to virtual. According to this study, medium-sized businesses find it 40% more cost-effective to employ third-party cloud platforms than maintaining an in-house system. 

3. IoMT

Another promising new technology trend is the Internet of Medical Things (IoMT). The healthcare and life sciences industries have seen significant changes due to technological breakthroughs in healthcare information technology (healthcare IT).

According to this analysis, the worldwide IoMT market was worth USD 41.17 billion in 2020. The pandemic’s worldwide effect has been unprecedented and astounding, with the IoMT reporting a positive demand impact across all areas. During 2021-2028, the IoMT market will increase at a CAGR of 29.5 percent, from $30.79 billion in 2021 to $187.60 billion in 2028. The increase in CAGR is due to the demand and expansion of this industry.

Here, at ITJ, we are devoted to serving fast-growing, high-value market sectors specializing in the Healthcare and Life Sciences industry that contribute to the growth of the Cali Baja region. With a Nearshore model, working with the highest quality software engineers, data scientists, and creative designers from across Mexico and Latin America, ITJ enables companies to create world-class software engineering centers of excellence in America. For more information about our experience, you can read about the New IoMT software engineering facility in Tijuana.