healthcare industry is expected to step up spending on cybersecurity, with hospitals currently allocating 8–10% of their IT budgets for hiring experts and deploying tools to prevent cyberattacks. According to a Deloitte India analysis, this will increase to 12–15% in the next two years– from a reactive to a proactive cybersecurity readiness.
Unlike the financial services sector, healthcare has been slower in adopting digital technologies. However, recent data breaches and rising cyber threats have prompted large hospital chains and their board members to prioritise patient data protection highlighted the ‘Cyber Resilience in Hospitals’ report by Deloitte and the Data Security Council of India (DSCI). While the Indian healthcare system is valued at $66 billion and projected to surpass $100 billion by 2027 cyber readiness and digital infrastructure needs to be developed.
Nearly 60% of healthcare organisations globally suffered a cyberattack in 2023, according to a study by Sophos, earlier reported by ET. This includes India's top institutions such as the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) and the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) wherein the personal data of over 81.5 million Indians was compromised and found for sale on the dark web.
«The executive management in corporate hospitals is increasingly coming from industries with higher cyber maturity, driving a shift in focus toward robust cybersecurity measures. We're moving from reactive monitoring to offensive cybersecurity,” Vikram