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Medical Device Connectivity and System Interoperability in Europe must be secure and effective

Thursday May 22, 2025 11:20 - 11:40 Innovation area

Lecturer: Fabrice Dabilly

Track: Innovation Area

Healthcare-related cybercrimes are on the rise and impact not only patients and healthcare providers, but also entire populations. For example, the 2024 ransomware attack on Change Healthcare in the USA forced several medical practices into bankruptcy, reducing the availability of services in their communities. And, in 2020, cybercriminals attacked Vaastamo in Finland to extort the provider, threatening to disclose patients’ confidential mental health and psychotherapy records. 




The complexity of medical and care information systems (MCIS) used by providers presents opportunities for malicious actors to penetrate an organization’s network, crawl its IT infrastructure and seize assets, with further potential to disrupt the ability to deliver care. Providers strive to be resilient to such threats with the support of technology producers and regulators making medical devices and information systems as secure as possible. Medical device manufacturers, in particular, have a significant role to play, which entails incorporating ‘security-by-design’ principles into their monitoring and therapy products as required by laws and directives such as those mandated in the European Commission’s Medical Device Regulation (MDR). 

Implementation of new legislation and related cybersecurity requirements creates unique challenges for all parties, and particularly for manufacturers who must meet the provisions of the ever-evolving regulatory framework. 'Security-by-Design' is important when producing medical devices used within connectivity and interoperability solutions. There are proven and reliable practices to support hospital clients in protecting medical device data and providing a safe environment in several aspects. 

System connectivity and interoperability need to be kept simple to remain effective, while MCIS subsystems are called upon to provide more and more insights supporting better care decisions. The promise of the next generation architecture is to decouple the data producers (the medical devices) from the data consumers (the clinical applications) using a medical device information platform (MDIP) that acts as an isolating backbone

Language

English

Topic

Data and Information

Seminar type

Live + On site

Lecture type

Presentation

Objective of lecture

Tools for implementation

Level of knowledge

Introductory

Target audience

Management/decision makers
Politicians
Organizational development
Purchasers/acquisitions/eco nomy/HR
Technicians/IT/Developers
Researchers
Students
Care professionals
Healthcare professionals
Patient/user organizations

Keyword

Patient safety
Information security
Usability
Informatics/Interoperability

Lecturers

Profile image for Fabrice Dabilly

Fabrice Dabilly Lecturer

Head of R&D, Clinical Insight & Integration
Philips

Fabrice Dabilly is the Head of R&D, Supply Chain, and Procurement at Philips Clinical Integration & Insight Business Unit.
He has over 25 years of experience in engineering, software and hardware development, manufacturing, and industrial operations across international markets. Fabrice joined Philips through the acquisition of Capsule Technologies in 2021, having been part of the Capsule team since 2012.
Before joining Capsule, he held roles in software and hardware engineering, manufacturing, and supply chain at Pace Europe and STMicroelectronics. He also worked for Philips France, managing industrial operations and engineering projects.