Informe:
14% de los médicos a mantener los datos del paciente en los teléfonos
celulares, no utilice la contraseña
As the healthcare industry reacts to a streak ofransomware attacks against hospitals, a new report sheds light on a looming but
poorly-publicized threat: doctor's mobile communications practices. According
to thereport,
28 percent of doctors store patient data on their cell phones, and 80% of
doctors use a mobile device as a tool to assist their daily practice.
The report, published by Skycure,
found that 27.79 million doctors use a mobile device that contains a medical
app that is infected by high-risk malware. The study found 4.21 percent of
Android devices analyzed are infected by malicious apps.
“The magnitude of this was
extremely surprising, Skycure Marketing Vice President Varun Kohli told
SCMagazine.com. “There is absolutely no visibility.”
Many doctors do not practice basic
cyber hygiene. The report found that 14 percent of doctors have patient data on
mobile devices but do not even use a password on their device.
According to the study, 65 percent
of doctors use SMS to send patient information, 46 percent use photo messaging,
and 33 percent of doctors share data through Whatsapp. Patients may be
comforted that Whatsapp completed
its integration of the Signal Protocol into the company's online
messaging service, completing its end-to-end encryption process.
“It does not matter if you have
encryption. I still will be able to read all your traffic, if you have joined a
compromised network or if your device is compromised,” Kohli said.
In addition, researchers have
discovered a treasure trove of vulnerabilities and
Trojans that affect SMS text messages, including the Android.Bankosy
malware and Asacub
Trojan.
The number of infected devices used
by doctors is consistent with a February report that
found three percent of devices are infected with malware. This figure
translates to an average of more than 1,700 infected devices at an enterprise
connecting to a network.
Kohli said the report was prompted
by a US Department of Health and Human Services report that more than 260
healthcare organizations were breached in 2015. Nine percent of those breaches
involved a tablet or cell phone
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