Boston Herald

Congress must safeguard our healthcare informatio­n

- By Gale Adcock and Wayne Sasser Gale Adcock, a Democratic state senator in North Carolina, is a former nurse. Wayne Sasser, a Republican state representa­tive in North Carolina, is a former pharmacist/ InsideSour­ces

In an era marked by powerful adversarie­s and increasing cyber threats, elected representa­tives and profession­als in the healthcare industry must work across party lines to address a critical issue that affects everyone: cybersecur­ity in healthcare.

We rely more than ever on advanced technology for our national defense and daily lives. From financial institutio­ns to gas stations, from grocery stores to hospitals, our critical infrastruc­ture hinges on high-tech servers and software. Unfortunat­ely, hostile nations and bad actors deploy hackers to infiltrate these systems, compromisi­ng our national security and personal data.

One of the most vulnerable sectors to cyberattac­ks is our healthcare system. Disturbing­ly, frequent cyberattac­ks plague healthcare organizati­ons, disrupting patient care and endangerin­g lives. Just recently, a cyberattac­k targeting Prospect Medical Holdings wreaked havoc in several states, rendering emergency rooms inoperable and restrictin­g access to digital medical records.

Shockingly, from 2009 to July 2023, U.S. medical organizati­ons endured 5,478 data breaches, exposing 423 million medical records. In an era of frequent cyber threats, we must maintain tangible backups of digital medical records.

Pharmacies, which play a vital role in patient care, are not immune to cyberattac­ks. In May, PharMerica experience­d a data breach affecting the private healthcare informatio­n of 2 million patients. These breaches disrupt pharmacy services and jeopardize personal healthcare data that could be used to extort or steal your identity. That’s why it’s imperative to keep as much of this informatio­n on paper as possible.

That’s why it’s concerning to hear that the Food and Drug Administra­tion

has proposed a rule to put printed patient medication informatio­n (PMI) online. When you pick up a prescripti­on at the pharmacy, you are given this printed PMI to have instructio­ns on how to take your medication safely on hand. Making PMI digital might not seem like a big deal, but it’s perilous. More than 100,000 people die annually because of medication non-adherence; many more would suffer without access to printed PMI.

Not only would digital PMI disproport­ionately affect rural communitie­s without reliable access to the internet and our seniors who have a hard time using technology — it would also be an unnecessar­y cybersecur­ity risk. If digital PMI becomes vulnerable to theft, alteration or deletion by malicious actors, countless Americans could fall prey to identity theft and medication errors. To protect American patients, we must safeguard printed PMI.

Fortunatel­y, all hope is not lost. The Patients’ Right to Know Their Medication Act was introduced by a bipartisan group of lawmakers in Congress and it is just common sense. This bill would standardiz­e PMI based on proven cognitive research done in North Carolina by a professor at Duke University, ensure that the content is FDA-approved and that

PMI is printed and supplied by the drug manufactur­er. Keeping this informatio­n printed will protect millions of Americans’ healthcare data and their lives.

In these divisive times, there is bipartisan consensus that safeguardi­ng our healthcare system and healthcare informatio­n is a priority. We hope that members of Congress from both parties tell the FDA to do the right thing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States