Why the Department of Homeland Security Should be Concerned About Healthcare Records - October 13, 2009
Orlando Florida - Often we read the headlines on how to protect ourselves is becoming ever more problematic. For some it’s as simple as having the ability to carry a concealed weapon, premised on the idea that if you want to hurt me, be prepared for the consequences. Needless to say, that’s extreme security process when it comes to healthy living. Most of us enjoy our lives without the need to put a gun beside our mouse and keyboard.
Security needs have expanded. Everywhere we turn there’s potential harm to us personally and has real long-term consequences. "More troubling is the fact that most of it is out of our own individual control. No longer is it about the basics of locking the doors of your car, home and maybe a safe that’s stashed in the basement", says Brian McCarthy CEO and Founder of Sencilo HealthIT Solutions and well known speaker on the subject of data privacy.
Along the PC and the Internet
Today we use personal firewalls and anti-virus software that we hope protects our information and valuables. And that doesn’t protect the most valuable part of your life – information about you. Information about you and your family is everywhere and you can’t go buy protection for it – from anywhere or anyone. You can’t even call the police to find out. For years, fraud based on identity theft has been a significant challenge to defeat. The simple things that help prevent such opportunities are well established: Shredding or burning junk mail credit card offers and other financial information and records before they hit the trash bin. Destroying computer hard drives or wiping them clean using software. Phishing and junk email is becoming easier to manage and control, although it still has a long way to go. Are there other areas beyond our control that could be damaging?
Yes. Too many areas are beyond our personal ability to protect. And it’s going to expand in the future. Now on the U.S. Administration’s radar screen is EMR — Electronic Medical Records — which will lower the administration component of medical services. Hopefully instead of spending hours filling out forms, and staff spending hours sorting and inputting paper forms, that cycle time is actually used to attend to your medical needs and service. The doctor would see your entire medical history, ensuring that every allergy and drug you have taken is taken into consideration in medical treatment and ensuring that the right consultations are prescribed. In general terms that will increase efficiencies in the medical industry – lowering costs.
This creates a whole new set of security problems that go beyond just worrying about who is making loans in your name and destroying your credit. And worse, we don’t have any direct personal control in securing or protecting ourselves on who has access or management of this information. Medical records are the next big area of information that is now becoming digitized and recorded. Over the past 5 years, every medical visit, drug and appointment you have ever had is now bar-coded, logged and tracked on paper and sometimes the local clinic you go to. If you visited the emergency room at a hospital, that visit was likely recorded on the local server at that facility. The records will include every personal detail about you and your family’s health, becoming the basis of information for EMR. Local medical record storage has never been a problem since most systems are not accessible from the outside world and thus are on a computer server, but segregated from an integrated or national system. That will soon change, says McCarthy.
Gone will be the days that your medical records are simply stored in a file at your local family doctor’s clinic. If someone is “authorized” to see them, it will be in nanoseconds, not a few days by way of a courier service. Checks and balances for authorized access will be easy components to solve. Many countries already have some wide area storage of information about patients since it’s a national medical insurance program, often run by the provincial or state government. Many are now seeing problems from within the medical industry such as internal fraud billing for medical visit, specialist visits and prescription drug services becoming a real financial concern. Analytics is about to get a huge surge in business just like what the credit card industry does today.
With such information now being available and archived, that brings about huge security and privacy challenges that courts, legal experts and lawmakers will be faced with for decades. Software and hardware solutions for such applications will have to face performance scrutiny to standards as high as the Pentagon’s. The value of the data is potentially significant. In the wrong hands it creates a massive set of protection and security challenges beyond what most envision. Credit card data is selling to the highest bidder to the tune of millions. Medical records are worth significantly more.
The security of the information asks more questions than we have current answers for; who has access and who protects it? Suddenly this becomes more than just a series of ethics debates. In the United States, and in fact, most of the world, insurance companies already have significant checks and balances in place to ensure data integrity for claims and patient records for each claim made, are in fact secured and protected. Those records are not a complete picture of your medical history – but soon they will be if not properly controlled, protected and policies put into place. In some countries, your premiums are determined by that information, just like your car insurance is. The more problems you keep on making claims for, the higher your insurance premiums are or worse, discontinued. Now consider if the information about your entire family is now available or accessed, without your consent and what that implies. The 5 W’s comes to mind — Who, What, Where, When, Why — are all checks and balances that while solvable will create critical challenges to the health of the system. An example is what if that information is now in a central data center and not just at one insurance, hospital or clinic facility; who ensures the integrity of the data being input and is it accurate? Don’t even ask if you have access to it.
Pharmaceutical companies would find complete electronic medical records a treasure trove for what drugs to maintain low cost and which ones to charge premiums for, literately right down to a city block radius. The architecture of the data centers will likely follow industry standards, such as Critical Infrastructure Protection (CIP) parameters. But who is going to protect, secure and watch over the information? What regulatory or enforcement agency is ensuring your privacy rights are going to be adhered too? And what if the data is shipped outside of the country – then what laws or regulations protect your information then? If a major disaster strikes, is the data safe, redundant in security, access or storage? Having Clint Eastwood with a .357 Magnum at the front door of the data center isn’t going to help.
For more information please call (407) 265-6293 or visit us at: http://www.sencilo.com/healthIT
Why Sencilo HealthIT Solutions
When it comes to your healthcare computing needs, Sencilo HealthIT Solutions's main objective is to provide a turnkey solution that can essentially sustain itself. When you choose Sencilo HealthIT Solutions, you don't just gain a vendor who provides you with technology. You get a business partner who walks with you through every step of the process
Sencilo HealthIT Solutions eHealthcare Architecture: More than technology
With Sencilo HealthIT Solutions eHealthcare Architecture, you can leverage the same productivity tools and technology resources that have transformed business. And you get a full portfolio of services too. By working with Sencilo HealthIT Solutions, you can get:
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A website customized for your institution
A full portfolio of robust solutions
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In addition to providing high-quality technology at a low cost, Sencilo HealthIT Solutions Professional Services can help you plan your healthcare computing from the ground up. By working with you from the initial construction phases, we can help you save time and money—and lead to a truly customized solution.
Sencilo HealthIT Solutions Professional Services offers complete services that include:
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About Us
Sencilo HealthIT Solutions is a Florida-based integrator specializing in EMR EHR Cost Cutting storage, security and managed services solutions. Sencilo delivers a comprehensive portfolio of products from best-of-breed hardware and software from multiple manufacturers including VMware, Dell Fujitsu Data Domain, EMC, Hitachi, Symantec, HDS, IBM, Commvault, Xiotech and HP. Its technical expertise is known throughout the storage and security industry. Clients include leading corporations, major financial institutions, top universities, government facilities, as well as small to medium size businesses. Sencilo's professional services include consulting, integration, project management, storage virtualization installation, maintenance and knowledge transfer.
Sencilo has offices throughout Florida including: Jacksonville, Daytona Beach, Tampa, St. Petersburg, Orlando, Hialeah, St. Augustine, Gainesville, Ocala, Palm Coast, Clearwater, Kissimmee, Lakeland, Maitland and Cape Canaveral Green Simpana Offerings Projects: BC DR planning Replication De-Dup De-Dupe iSCSI SAN NAS VMware Security EMC NetApp HP IBM Quantum Compliance VTL Data Domain vs Gartner Magic Quadrant Quadrent LTO Backup Exc Pure Disk NetBackup Networker TSM Commvault BakBone D2D D2D2T compare cloud data deduplication thin provisioning DXi Global Compression DDX virtual tape library Data Reduction SEPATON FALCON compare Celerra CLARiiON Equallogic Sencilo HealthIT Solutions NS20 NS40 CX4 CX3-20 CX3-40 CX3-80 FAS2050 FAS3050 Xiotech Nexsan Avamar DLD3 1500 D3 Storwiz storage compression data Ocarina Networks A-SIS compare Sepaton infopro BlueArc OnStor Microsoft Unified Storage data protection StorageX Brocade FAQ SSD Solid state disk SANmelody FalconStor tier zero Xiotech ISE nx4 ax4 greenBytes ZFS Sun Top 10 ROBOBak managed services hosting cloud grid Datacore Compellent compellant equallogic lefthand networks don't buy storage stop buying storage itguardian cherub networks Arkeia Network Backup appliance Data Recovery Backup Health IT Healthcare IT Digital Hospital Allscripts Patient Data electronic health record P4P rules and the HITECH Act PayerView Rankings practice management tools $44,000 in Medicare or $66,000 in Medicaid from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act eClinicalWorks, Allscripts, NextGen, GE Centricity, and Meditech
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