Our latest Imprivata thought leadership blog examines the continued challenges of third-party access management, plus best practices to mitigate risks.
“Not enough. And not fast enough.”
That’s the bottom-line progress assessment by Imprivata leaders on the current state of vendor privileged access risk management. Here’s a look at some key obstacles hindering organizations’ progress, and how they can overcome them.
It was with great regret that I canceled my trip to Healthport’s first HIM Educational Summit earlier this week. (A rampant stomach bug claimed me as the last victim in our family of four, and so I thought my healthcare conference colleagues would, in fact, appreciate my absence.) I had been scheduled to moderate a discussion on the exchange of personal health information within an accountable care organization (ACO) – a topic that I thought I knew a lot about, until I began researching the subject.
Healthcare leaders see passwordless access as mission-critical, yet few have fully implemented it. This stepwise roadmap outlines how to close the passwordless gap without disrupting clinical workflows.
Healthcare IT leaders are aligned on one point: passwords are no longer sustainable.
Teradici, the developer of the PC-over-IP (PCoIP) protocol, will showcase its full range of desktop virtualization solutions, as well as its joint solution with Imprivata, at the VMware User Group in Indianapolis on July 26. Teradici PCoIP solutions provide the unique remote display protocol that is essential to the performance of all VMware View deployments. In addition to demonstrations of the Teradici APEX 2800 server offload card, Teradici will also be showcasing its joint solution with Imprivata.
Some 100 companies and organizations have been named to Modern Healthcare's Best Places to Work in Healthcare for 2012. The recognition program, now in its fifth year, honors workplaces in healthcare that enable employees to perform at their optimum level to provide patients and customers with the best possible care, products and services.
Although the DEA Electronic Prescriptions for Controlled Substances (EPCS) ruling came out in 2010 many healthcare organizations are just now, in mid-2012, starting to look at what they need to do to roll it out. Why is that? Well the ruling was just that, a ruling, many factors had to be in place by EMR/e-Prescribing vendors, pharmacy vendors, Surescripts and providers themselves.