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Patient Access Solutions Market Is Booming Worldwide by 2026 – KSU

The Worldwide Patient Access Solutions Industry is Expected to Reach $2 4 Billion by 2025

Share this article Share this article ResearchAndMarkets.com s offering. The global patient access solutions market is projected to reach USD 2.4 billion by 2025 from USD 1.6 billion in 2020, at a CAGR of 8.5%. Increasing patient volume and subsequent growth in the demand for health insurance, the growing importance of denials management, declining reimbursement rates, increase in the volume of unstructured data in the healthcare industry, and the rising need to curtail escalating healthcare costs are the major factors driving the growth of this market. However, high deployment costs are expected to restrain the growth of this market to a certain extent. Services to have the largest share in Patient access solutions market

LSU Health adds UMC New Orleans to list of places affected by cyber intrusion that exposed patient info to hackers

ZIP Advertisement LSU Health adds UMC New Orleans to list of places affected by cyber intrusion that exposed patient info to hackers Share Updated: 12:52 PM CST Jan 8, 2021 WDSU Digital Team LSU Health adds UMC New Orleans to list of places affected by cyber intrusion that exposed patient info to hackers Share Updated: 12:52 PM CST Jan 8, 2021 Hide Transcript Show Transcript THAT’S THE WORST LOSS ON RECORD NEW AT NOON, LSU HEALTH SAYS A CYBER INTRUSION THAT IMPACTED THEM, ALSO AFFECTS UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER OF NEW ORLEANS. THE BREACH WAS FIRST REPORTED BACK IN NOVEMBER. BUT LSU HEALTH HAS SINCE LEARNED THAT THE EMPLOYEE’S ELECTRONIC MAILBOX ALSO INCLUDED INFORMATION ABOUT UMC. THE HOSPITAL IS NOW IN THE PR

Report on Patient Privacy Volume 20, Number 12 Privacy Briefs: December 2020 | Health Care Compliance Association (HCCA)

[author: Jane Anderson] ◆ Suspected North Korean hackers have tried to break into the systems of British drugmaker AstraZeneca in recent weeks as the company races to deploy its COVID-19 vaccine, Reuters reported. [1] The hackers posed as recruiters on networking site LinkedIn and WhatsApp to approach AstraZeneca staff with fake job offers, Reuters’ sources said. They then sent documents purporting to be job descriptions that were laced with malicious code. The hacking attempts targeted “a broad set of people,” including staff working on COVID-19 research, according to one of Reuters’ sources, but are not thought to have been successful. The tools and techniques used in the attacks indicated that they were part of an ongoing hacking campaign that U.S. officials and cybersecurity researchers have attributed to North Korea, according to the article. Cyberattacks against health entities, vaccine scientists and drugmakers have soared during the COVID-19 pandemic. Micr

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