Healthcare and cloud in Apac

Ana Isabella
APAC CIO Outlook
Published in
2 min readAug 6, 2019

Lately, most IT and security professionals began with the very idea of keeping mission-critical data, especially protected health information with the help of in the public cloud. Cost savings and lively remote hosting can offer the risks of entrusting such precious data to a third-party were too significant to breeze past.

When the cloud technology was still in its infancy, many industries, including healthcare, were trying to hold on to the cloud demands and the probable risks associated with the technology. The lack of transparency and standards were of primary concern along with the issues of privacy, security, and overall compliance.

Cloud and Healthcare in APAC Region

The chief cloud providers having the most probability of meeting sound security requirements were not in favor to sign any business agreements. The very disapproval resulted as a deal-breaker for the healthcare industry. Furthermore, for security capabilities, the public cloud often lacked maturity and sophistication. Therefore, several investments and controls related to the security of information systems and data were unavailable and were unsuccessful in replicating in cloud environments.

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The potential security considerations necessarily intended on having to take care of two disparate sets of controls, one in the cloud and the other on-premise. The proposal did not make any sense from a financial and supportability perspective.

Much like other industries, technology is constantly evolving in the highly competitive healthcare industry as well. Most of them are widely adopting cloud-based solutions for patient management systems and EHRs for offering efficient services for both patients and practitioners. The cloud today has become one of the most sophisticated solutions with features including on-demand computing by leveraging the latest technology to deploy, use, and access networked information, resources, and applications.

As per market reports, the global healthcare cloud computing market is anticipated to reach $9.48 billion in 2020 from $3.73 billion in 2015 — a 20.5 percent compound annual growth rate. This rapid development with innovative technology will boost the demands of healthcare systems’ to maintain and improve quality healthcare while stabilizing healthcare costs.

Most of the leading hospital facilities are changing their legacy systems to include electronic health records (EHRs), and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act enforced by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA). This effective transformation provides timely access to medical records to administrative personnel, physicians, and nurses. Read More

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