Imprivata Confirm ID provides hospitals with a single, extensible authentication platform for the healthcare enterprise that addresses critical cyber security threats and compliance challenges
Hospitals are adopting virtual desktops to give their care providers faster, easier, and more flexible ways to access patient information and clinical applications. For hospitals using Microsoft Remote Desktop Services to deliver these capabilities, Enterprise Access Management for virtual desktop access provides an easy and proven way to ensure success by streamlining clinicians’ virtualized workflows.
IS4U is a Belgium company specialized in Identity Management, Access Management, Federation and Security with a lot of experience in different markets as healthcare, government, banking and manufacture.
IS4U implemented and distributed SSO solution since 2009 to reduce logon times, improve security, enable strong authentication and activate roaming sessions. The ultimately goal is to provide a more secure and end-user friendly environment.
Lexington, Mass.—February 24, 2016—Imprivata®, the healthcare IT security company, will showcase innovative new technologies and partner collaborations at the HIMSS16 Conference & Exhibition (February 29-March 4, 2016 in Las Vegas) that will further enable care providers to securely and efficiently access, communicate, and transact patient health information.
This week, at the HIMSS16 Conference & Exhibition (February 29-March 4, 2016 in Las Vegas), Todd Smith, CMIO for HealthEast Care System, and Lou Gallagher, System Director of Engineering and Architecture at HealthEast Care Systems, will take the stage to present a session titled, "Improving Physician Efficiency and Patient Care with EPCS” as part of the HIMSS16 education program.
Cybersecurity concerns have become much more than a hypothetical for vulnerable hospitals, most of whom are finally realizing just how vulnerable they are. So it’s no surprise that IT security vendors will surely be among the most visited booths on the HIMSS16 exhibit floor.
A Big, Big, Big Problem
Windows XP is also a continuing headache in too many medical devices, Miri says. "I just saw one the other day in the UK, where a Windows XP device that was actually a lab instrument was infected with malware and had inadvertently infected an entire NHS hospital."