HSCC’s AI Cyber Guidance Is a Map. HTM Pros Are the Guides (Editor’s Message)
New AI cybersecurity guidance is set to roll out in early 2026, as AI becomes more embedded in healthcare technology.
New AI cybersecurity guidance is set to roll out in early 2026, as AI becomes more embedded in healthcare technology.
A new HSCC preview outlines the phased rollout of AI cybersecurity resources designed to help healthcare organizations manage emerging risks across operations, governance, device security, and third-party tools.
Hari Prasad, CEO of Yosi Health, discusses how digital front doors, interoperability, and data safeguards affect smaller practices—and the role of HTM in supporting them.
New AI cybersecurity guidance is set to roll out in early 2026, as AI becomes more embedded in healthcare technology.
By turning equipment data into actionable insights, HTM teams are reshaping how hospitals manage technology, budgets, and patient safety.
Read MoreThe guidance promotes the use of a Software Bill of Materials to increase transparency in the software supply chain, impacting medical device security and vulnerability management.
Read MoreWhy HTM teams must treat “old but working” as a high-stakes cyber risk—and how to protect patients and operations now.
Read MoreSupporting telehealth means managing devices and data far beyond the hospital walls.
Read MoreThe updated voluntary guidance reflects the evolution of SBOM practices and aims to help organizations better manage software supply chain risks.
Read MoreThe new system uses generative AI to detect sophisticated phishing and social engineering attacks that traditional filters may miss.
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HiLabs says the HITRUST i1 certification reinforces its commitment to data privacy and strengthens protections against evolving cybersecurity threats.