Healthcare Business Review

Advertise

with us

  • Europe
    • US
    • EUROPE
    • APAC
    • CANADA
    • LATAM
  • Home
  • Sections
    Business Process Outsourcing
    Compliance & Risk Management
    Consulting Service
    Facility Management Services
    Financial Services
    Healthcare Construction
    Healthcare Digital Marketing
    Healthcare Education
    Healthcare Marketing
    Healthcare Procurement
    Healthcare Staffing
    Medical Transcription and Translation
    Medical Transportation
    Psychological Services
    Radiology
    Therapy Services
    Waste Management
    Business Process Outsourcing
    Compliance & Risk Management
    Consulting Service
    Facility Management Services
    Financial Services
    Healthcare Construction
    Healthcare Digital Marketing
    Healthcare Education
    Healthcare Marketing
    Healthcare Procurement
    Healthcare Staffing
    Medical Transcription and Translation
    Medical Transportation
    Psychological Services
    Radiology
    Therapy Services
    Waste Management
  • Contributors
  • News
  • Vendors
  • Conferences
  • CXO Awards
×
#

Healthcare Business Review Weekly Brief

Be first to read the latest tech news, Industry Leader's Insights, and CIO interviews of medium and large enterprises exclusively from Healthcare Business Review

Subscribe

loading

Thank you for Subscribing to Healthcare Business Review Weekly Brief

  • Home
  • Contributors

Patching as a Panacea Operational Realities on Medical Device Patching from a Hospital Perspective

Healthcare Business Review

Samantha Jacques, PhD, FACHE, AAMIF, McLaren Clinical Engineering Services (MCES), McLaren Health Care
Tweet

With the rise in cybersecurity events, remediation teams have become hyper focused on patching as the primary methodology to mitigate software vulnerabilities – the faster the better. In businesses where networks are composed of computers, laptops, and servers, pushing patches centrally using automation has become operationally orchestrated to such a level that events are almost as smooth as a master composed symphony.


Unfortunately, for those hospitals trying to patch their medical devices, there is no symphony. Instead, it looks much more like a fifth-grade band class with students who just picked up their first instruments –an off-key uncoordinated cacophony in need of much more practice.


Hospitals have thousands of devices from hundreds of different manufacturers that sit on hospital networks. In some hospitals, over 50 percent of those devices are no longer supported by the manufacturer and so patches aren’t even available. For devices where patching is available, the process to get that patch from the manufacturer and install it is almost as varied as the number of manufactures hospitals have. So, let’s deep dive into what it looks like.


The first question asked – is the device supported? If not, it’s nearly impossible to even determine if the vulnerability affects that device. The manufacturers generally don’t have a team or any individuals who know these devices well enough to know the impacts of vulnerabilities. These devices require other risk mitigation methodologies to mitigate any potential impact of the vulnerability.


If the device is supported, then next we wait. According to FDA guidance, medical device manufacturers are supposed to assess vulnerabilities and notify affected parties in 30 days. Almost no manufacturer meets that guideline. Manufacturers then produce a patch (if required), assess if it needs 510k approval, and get it cleared by the FDA (if applicable). 


This can take upwards of 2 years. Although progress has been made, there is a highly variable amount of time between the disclosure of a vulnerability and the release of a patch. In the interim, hospitals are required to determine whether they want to put a temporary mitigation in place while they wait. Hospitals also need to track where each manufacturer is in the process of developing patches or else the vulnerability can be forgotten.So now a patch is released (Yeah!). The next step is to acquire that patch. Some manufacturers push the notification of patch availability to hospitals via automated emails or physical mail. Other manufacturers require hospitals to check their webpage regularly to learn a patch is released (remember thousands of devices, hundreds of manufacturers). The prospect of even checking hundreds of websites a month is daunting because that requires manual resources that are limited, and this could be a task that is automated.


Finally, a patch is downloaded and now needs to be deployed. There are few medical devices where patches can be pushed remotely. For nearly all patches, each device needs to be physically handled to upload the patch. Some manufacturers allow hospital staff to complete this task, while other manufacturers require their staff (or a third party at the direction of the manufacturer) install the patches. In either instance, the physical reality of touching thousands of devices is significantly challenging. The removal of a device from patient care also causes operational issues, which is another strong deterrent from patching. Once install and testing on every single device is complete the patching process is now complete – onto the next vulnerability!


To truly streamline patching, standardized processes to develop and deploy patches using automated mechanisms need to be incorporated into the medical device lifecycle


Once the entire process is understood, the operational reality of how hard patching medical devices is becomes understood. Just the tracking of each vulnerability and where in the process each device is makes one’s head spin.


Hospitals and health care systems that have started to tackle these challenges have implemented risk ranking criteria to prioritize a smaller pool of medical devices to focus on. Although these techniques can help focus teams to highrisk areas, it still leaves devices unmitigated and networks at risk. To truly streamline patching, standardized processes to develop and deploy patches using automated mechanisms need to be incorporated into the medical device lifecycle. Centralized repositories of disclosed vulnerabilities with vendor specific patching progress need to be established, with “map to the attacker” arguments failing to be stronger than the argument for streamlining and speeding up mitigation of risk to the healthcare delivery organization. Medical device manufacturers in collaboration with healthcare delivery organizations and public/private partnerships have begun to look at these processes. Hopefully these groups will continue to collaborate on ways to enhance patching and enable the ecosystem to move more towards that seemingly effortless symphony. Until then patient safety is placed at risk due to a cumbersome and poorly aligned ecosystem – it seems we are back to band practice.


Weekly Brief

loading
> <
  • Current Issue
  • Current Issue
  • Turning a Bad Moment into a Better One

    Alexia Spizzirri, Director of Patient Experience and Employee Engagement, St. Bernard Hospital
  • International Exhibition in the Field of Medicine - United Medical Expo

  • Improving the Patient Experience - Empathy is Basic but Forgotten

    Neil Creasey, System Director of Pharmacy Operations, Holzer Health System
  • Early Mobilization Protocol in Critical Patients: Experience of Hospital do Rocio

    Dr. Rebeca Simao Moreira, Neurointensivist, Coordinator of the Neurological ICU, Franciane Rocha dos Anjos, Physiotherapist, Manager of the Physiotherapy Service, Dulcinéia Dias Messias, Physiotherapist, Coordinator of Physiotherapy and Gustavo Gomes, Physiotherapy Intern, Hospital do Rocio
  • Collaborative Care Model: An Innovative Approach to Staffing in the Post-Covid World

    Jimmy Williams, PharmD, MBA, BCGP, Associate Vice-President, Inpatient Pharmacy Services, OU Health
  • Revolutionizing Patient Care with Innovative Strategies and Solutions

    Madeline Camejo, Vice President and Chief Pharmacy Officer, Baptist HealthSouth Florida
  • Navigating the Ever-Changing Healthcare Landscape: A Journey of Continuous Learning and Strategic Adaptation

    Elizabeth Oyekan, PharmD, FCSHP, CPHQ, VP Pharmacy and Imaging Services, Stanford Health Care
  • Standardization of Solutions in Hospitals: a Path to Efficiency

    Nuno Peres, Head of Construction, CUF, Hospitals and Clinics

Read Also

Resilience in Modern Healthcare

Resilience in Modern Healthcare

Imana Mo Minard MSN-ed, RN, CENP, EMT-P, Director of Nursing, Corewell Health East
READ MORE
Leading High-Reliability Healthcare Delivery

Leading High-Reliability Healthcare Delivery

Dr Ana Maria Y. Jimenez, Executive Director of Nursing, Aspen Medical – Fiji
READ MORE
Importance of Safety in Testosterone Therapy

Importance of Safety in Testosterone Therapy

Mayo Clinic, Director of Endocrinology Services, Maria Lopez
READ MORE
Building Sustainable Care Models through APP Leadership

Building Sustainable Care Models through APP Leadership

Truett Smith, Director of Advanced Practice, Primary Care, Atrium Health
READ MORE
A Systematic Approach to Radiology Workforce Stabilization: Recruitment, Retention and Technological Optimization

A Systematic Approach to Radiology Workforce Stabilization: Recruitment, Retention and Technological Optimization

Julie Singewald, Interim System Shared Clinical Services Operations Leader, Essentia Health
READ MORE
Bridging IT and Healthcare for Smarter Care

Bridging IT and Healthcare for Smarter Care

Benedict Sulaiman, Director of IT-CTO, Mandaya Hospital Group
READ MORE

A Systematic Approach to Radiology Workforce Stabilization: Recruitment, Retention and Technological Optimization

Julie Singewald, Interim System Shared Clinical Services Operations Leader, Essentia Health

Bridging IT and Healthcare for Smarter Care

Benedict Sulaiman, Director of IT-CTO, Mandaya Hospital Group

Innovating Pediatric Healthcare with Genomics

Dr. Catherine Brownstein, Manager, Molecular Genomics Core Facility, Boston Children's Hospital

Balancing Technology and Humanity in Healthcare Leadership

Richard Phillips, Chief Medical Officer, Baptist Health System KY & IN
Loading...
Copyright © 2025 Healthcare Business Review. All rights reserved. |  Subscribe |  Sitemap |  About us |  Newsletter |  Feedback Policy |  Editorial Policy follow on linkedin
CLOSE

Specials

I agree We use cookies on this website to enhance your user experience. By clicking any link on this page you are giving your consent for us to set cookies. More info

This content is copyright protected

However, if you would like to share the information in this article, you may use the link below:

https://consulting-service.healthcarebusinessrevieweurope.com/cxoinsight/patching-as-a-panacea-operational-realities-on-medical-device-patching-from-a-hospital-perspective-nwid-543.html