US Healthcare Cybersecurity Market to Reach $8.70 Billion by 2023

Flexible pricing to prove a significant competitive advantage in the healthcare industry, creating growth opportunities, finds Frost & Sullivan

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SANTA CLARA, CaliforniaApril 25, 2019 – New technologies such as the IoTcloud services, and AI are increasing the points of penetrability, compelling healthcare organizations to adopt new security systems. Future healthcare IT spending is expected to increase across network perimeter protectionendpoint protectionaccess managementpublic-facing propertiesdetecting and mitigating exploits, and managed services, driving this market toward $8.70 billion by 2023.

Frost & Sullivan’s recent analysis, The US Healthcare Cybersecurity Market, provides essential healthcare cybersecurity market tracking data as well as revenue projections through 2023. It also presents insights into the market drivers and restraints that will shape cybersecurity spending by healthcare IT over the next five years and the three big predictions for this market.

The industry has numerous niche players that deliver specific cybersecurity solutions to address various healthcare security concerns. These companies, as well as the larger ones, can gain additional growth opportunities by:

  • Applying integrated security across the clinical workflow instead of a collection of point solutions.
  • Providing solutions that can scale to potentially thousands of devices and offer endpoint protection for mobile devices.
  • Establishing flexible approaches for the acquisition of cybersecurity suites.
  • Incorporating capabilities that decrease complexity and increase productivity.
  • Enabling new forms of security management such as location-based access and biometrics.
  • Addressing the budget concerns of healthcare IT by offering flexible pricing models.

“The healthcare market is a prime target of hackers looking for protected health information (PHI). The lack of cybersecurity expertise is prompting healthcare IT organizations to seek managed support, which, in turn, is accelerating the move to cloud-based computing services,” said Mike Jude, Digital Health Research Manager. “To make optimum use of the opportunities, cybersecurity vendors need to develop solutions that integrate with existing healthcare IT systems and applications. The solutions must be able to accommodate and scale with new technologies such as IoT, cloud, and Big Data.”

For more information, visit : http://frost.ly/3co