HHS Publishes Healthcare Cyber Security Guidelines Based on NIST CSF

HHS Publishes Healthcare Cyber Security Guidelines Based on NIST CSF

New HHS publication outlines top cyber threats & best practices for healthcare industry

Noting that cybersecurity is “the responsibility of every health care professional, from data entry specialists to physicians to board members,” the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has published Health Industry Cybersecurity Practices: Managing Threats and Protecting Patients (HICP). The four-volume publication, which was mandated by the Cybersecurity Act of 2015, is aimed at hospital executives and cybersecurity professionals in healthcare organizations of all sizes and leverages the NIST Cybersecurity Framework.

HHS Publishes Healthcare Cybersecurity Guidelines Based on NIST CSF

HHS: Email phishing & ransomware among top cyber threats to healthcare organizations

The HHS guide focuses on what the agency considers to be the current top cybersecurity threats to the healthcare industry: email phishing; ransomware; loss or theft of hardware; insider, accidental, or intentional data loss; and attacks against smart medical devices that put patient safety at risk. The publication’s two Technical Volumes outline 10 best practice areas to mitigate cybersecurity threats:

  • Email protection systems
  • Endpoint protection systems
  • Access management
  • Data protection and loss prevention
  • Asset management
  • Network management
  • Vulnerability management
  • Incident response
  • Medical device security
  • Cybersecurity policies

Rather than introducing a new framework, HHS instead maps its best practice and sub practice recommendations to those in the NIST CSF. Recognizing the fundamental differences and concerns that organizations of different sizes encounter, separate recommendations are given for small, medium, and large organizations.

The financial impact of healthcare breaches can be devastating, especially to small organizations. The HHS points out that the healthcare industry has the highest data breach cost of any industry, at an average of $408 per record and $2.2 million per organization. In 2016, the healthcare industry as a whole lost $6.2 billion to data breaches.

HHS urges proactive healthcare cybersecurity, comparing cyber hygiene to hand-washing

Healthcare cybersecurity has been a vexing issue for quite some time, and many issues stem from a lack of employee cybersecurity training. Unlike many industries, which made the switch from paper and typewriters to digital files and computers over a period of years, the healthcare industry digitized practically overnight. Employee training on cybersecurity best practices is notoriously spotty; healthcare organizations tend to focus on HIPAA compliance, with cybersecurity awareness an afterthought at best. The HHS notes that healthcare facilities often “deploy technologies without cybersecurity safeguards or use them (intentionally or unintentionally) without proper protections” and points out that four out of five U.S. physicians have experienced some form of cyber attack.

Employee buy-in presents another problem. Many front-line healthcare workers feel that their only job is to care for patients and that cybersecurity is the IT department’s problem. The HHS publication points out that in modern healthcare, cybersecurity is a function of patient care. Cyber attacks on electronic health records systems and smart medical devices don’t just disrupt business operations; they put patients’ health and even lives at risk. As such, the HHS states, healthcare workers must be taught to see cybersecurity hygiene the way they are taught to see hand hygiene; just as they wash their hands to prevent the spread of infections, they need to practice cyber hygiene to protect electronic patient records, IoT devices, and other healthcare systems from malware infections and other cyber attacks.

The cybersecurity experts at Lazarus Alliance have deep knowledge of the cybersecurity field, are continually monitoring the latest information security threats, and are committed to protecting organizations of all sizes from security breaches. Our full-service risk assessment services and Continuum GRC RegTech software will help protect your organization from data breaches, ransomware attacks, and other cyber threats.

Lazarus Alliance is proactive cybersecurity®. Call 1-888-896-7580 to discuss your organization’s cybersecurity needs and find out how we can help your organization adhere to cybersecurity regulations, maintain compliance, and secure your systems.

Glowing Neon malware sign on a digital projection background.

What Is Autonomous Malware?

We’re reaching the end of 2025, and looking ahead to 2026, most experts are discussing the latest threats that will shape the year ahead. This year, we’re seeing a new, but not unexpected, shift to autonomous threats driven by state-sponsored actors and AI.  With that in mind, a new generation of threats, broadly known as...Continue reading

Stay ahead of federal and industry security alerts with Lazarus Alliance. Featured

What CISA’s Emergency Directive 26-01 Means for Everyone

In mid-October 2025, the CISA issued one of its most urgent orders yet: Emergency Directive 26-01. The directive calls on all Federal Civilian Executive Branch (FCEB) agencies to immediately mitigate vulnerabilities in devices from F5 Networks following a state-sponsored breach of F5’s systems and access to portions of BIG-IP source code and vulnerability data. The event...Continue reading

Make sure that your software is secure with or without AI. Trust Lazarus Alliance. featured

Cybersecurity and Vetting AI-Powered Tools

A recent exploit involving a new AI-focused browser shone a light on a critical problem–namely, that browser security is a constant issue, and AI is just making that threat more pronounced. Attackers discovered a way to use that browser’s memory features to implant hidden instructions inside an AI assistant. Once stored, those instructions triggered unwanted...Continue reading

mnage security against insider threats with Lazarus Alliance. featured

Shutdown Security And Cyber Vulnerability

When the federal government shuts down, the public sees closed monuments, unpaid workers, and halted programs. What they do not see is the silent surge of cyberattacks targeting agencies already operating on fumes. During the most recent shutdown, attacks against U.S. government systems spiked by nearly 85%.  Cybersecurity failures during government disruptions rarely start with...Continue reading

Manage identity security and compliance with a trusted partner in Lazarus Alliance. featured

Identity and the Shift from Malware

The world of cyber threats is rapidly evolving, and while we can see these changes more generally, it’s always crucial to understand them concretely. As the 2025 CrowdStrike Global Threat Report shows us, the landscape of our industry is changing.  We’re digging into this report to discuss a challenging trend: the move of hackers foregoing...Continue reading

Harden security against new AI attack surfaces. Work with Lazarus Alliance. featured

Maintaining Compliance Against Prompt Injection Attacks

The increasing adoption of AI by businesses introduces security risks that current cybersecurity frameworks are not prepared to address. A particularly complex emerging threat is prompt injection attacks. These attacks manipulate the integrity of large language models and other AI systems, potentially compromising security protocols and legal compliance. Organizations adopting AI must have a plan...Continue reading

Stay ahead of CMMC changes with Lazarus Alliance. Featured

Are We Already Talking About CMMC 3.0?

The ink has barely dried on the CMMC final rule, and already the defense contracting community is buzzing with speculation about what comes next. Just when contractors thought they had a moment to catch their breath after years of regulatory limbo, whispers of CMMC 3.0 have begun circulating through the industry. But is this just...Continue reading

Lazarus Alliance helps enterprises manage identity security and data governance.

Centralizing Identity-Based Risk

As the traditional network boundary dissolves and remote work becomes standard practice, identities are the major frontier for security. Whether we’re talking about human users, service accounts, or machine identities, these have emerged as both the primary access mechanism and the most targeted attack vector.  It has become imperative for providers to centralize identity management...Continue reading

FedRAMP Authorization assessments from Lazarus Alliance. featured

Deviation and Significant Change Requests in FedRAMP: A Comprehensive Guide

FedRAMP provides a standardized approach to security assessment, authorization, and continuous monitoring for cloud products and services used by federal agencies. While the program’s rigorous baseline requirements ensure consistent security, the reality is that this consistency calls for a little flexibility.  This is where deviation requests and significant change requests come into play. These two...Continue reading

Get expert monitoring and security support with Lazarus Alliance featured

The Costs of Compliance and Data Breaches

Data is possibly one of the most valuable assets any organization holds. Customer information, employee records, and proprietary business intelligence present challenges because the data flowing through modern enterprises represents both significant opportunities and serious risks.  Businesses face a challenging balance: investing in compliance measures to protect sensitive information while also preparing for the real...Continue reading

No image Blank

Lazarus Alliance

Website: