In the recently released Cynergistek report on the state of healthcare sector cybersecurity framework adoption, I noticed an interesting trend - the rise in NIST CSF adoption and a surprising fall in HIPAA security rule compliance. I wanted to dive in and examine what might be causing this shift in healthcare industry framework usage.
I’ll briefly summarize the current standard for healthcare organizations - the HIPAA Security Rule. A supplement of HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996), developed by the Department of Health and Human Services, the HIPAA Security Rule emerged as a means to ensure that protect patients’ digital data.
There are six main sections or categories of the Security Rule (from NIST SP 800-66):
When it comes to patient care, information security leaders in the healthcare sector have an obligation to pursue gold-standard frameworks to ensure that patient information and patient records are secure.
In Cynergistek’s report, the healthcare industry is starting to see a decline in HIPAA Security Rule compliance - declining 2% for the industry as a whole year-over-year. What this says to me is that the industry, as with any highly regulated sector, is facing new regulations from multiple sources.
While HIPAA is the core of patient privacy, more and more standards are emerging that focus on specific subsectors (health insurance, for example, being faced with state-specific regulations built on the Model law). For CISOs working in these sectors, it is no longer enough to take these regulations as they come. Having a cohesive strategy to ensure that critical information stays secure requires using frameworks that leverage first principles that are at the core of these standards and regulations.
The National Institute for Standards and Technology’s Cybersecurity Framework is one of the most adopted frameworks regardless of industry. Originally developed under an executive order for improving critical infrastructure cybersecurity, the robust nature of the framework and its five Framework Core functions - identify, protect, detect, respond, recover - has allowed it to scale beyond critical infrastructure.
What struck me from Cynergistek’s report was the Security Rule compliance dropped by 2% year-over-year, and NIST Cybersecurity Framework adoption and compliance rose by the same amount - 2%. This speaks volumes about how healthcare organizations are working to manage their cybersecurity and cybersecurity risk. The NIST Framework is the guiding framework that informed the development of the DFARS mandate for the DoD supply chain (NIST Special Publication 800-171), the NYDFS cybersecurity regulation for financial services, and the Model Law for insurance. As the industry is faced with more regulations, checkbox thinking is no longer sufficient. Rather, working to implement the NIST CSF empowers organizations to build on the first principles of these regulations rather than being trapped in a reactionary loop.
Managing cybersecurity risk for any organization is rapidly evolving into a board-level issue. For some industries, it is a matter of remaining competitive and securing business. For healthcare organizations, the importance is much greater. To effectively manage cyber risk, proactiveness is no longer optional. The NIST CSF and its outcomes-based approach help organizations implement the appropriate activities and controls necessary for their organization specifically while also meeting the necessary compliance requirements.
The NIST CSF has proven to be that gold standard across industries and with an update time that moves the pace of technology development rather than regulatory bodies (with version 1.1 being released in 2017). Building a compliance and risk management program around the CSF allows information security teams to integrate new regulations easily, rather than reacting to new checkbox lists whenever a new rule is published.