Why medical cybersecurity is a team effort
Why medical cybersecurity is a team effort
https://www.dotmed.com/news/story/66465
Publish Date: 2026-06-16 10:14:00
Source Domain: www.dotmed.com
Medical device cybersecurity can no longer be viewed simply as an IT responsibility. Priyanka Sollinger, BS, MS, CHTM, AAMIF, vice president of cybersecurity services at Asimily, reinforced that point during the AAMI eXchange session, “Breaking Silos, Building Security: Collateral Duty for All.” Protecting connected medical devices, she said, requires shared accountability across healthcare technology management (HTM), IT, cybersecurity, procurement, clinical engineering, and vendors—roles that can no longer operate in silos.
Sollinger first raised the alarm about medical device cybersecurity at AAMI in 2015, and she said the stakes are even higher today. “Healthcare remains a top ransomware target,” she told attendees. “We have to advance how we manage these devices.”
Cyber safety, she argued, is patient safety. But many organizations still struggle with fragmented ownership and disconnected workflows.
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“Ownership confusion is a big [issue],” she said. The result is delayed remediation, duplicated effort, and gaps in vulnerability management. HTM teams often sit in the middle—expected to support cybersecurity without consistent access to the systems or tools needed to act effectively, Sollinger explained.
Those challenges grow quickly in connected environments. Hospitals now manage thousands of networked medical devices across multiple facilities, with responsibility split across procurement, IT, security, clinical engineering, and operations. When ownership is unclear, vulnerabilities linger while teams determine who has authority to act. What begins as a technology issue…