The first 100 days of the next Trump administration and new Congress will be a strong indicator of the next four years for the healthcare sector when it comes to cybersecurity, privacy and related regulatory and legislative issues in the new year, said Chelsea Arnone and Cassie Ballard of the College of Healthcare Information Management Executives.
“As we head into a new administration and Congress, it’s important for our team to make sure our members are staying vigilant about any cybersecurity, privacy changes to evolving political landscape that can bring about some new challenges, new opportunities. And they need to be prepared to adapt,” said Arnone in an interview with Information Security Media Group.
At least some of the policymaking in Congress and in the administration likely to occur will be a reaction to major incidents of the past year such as the Change Healthcare ransomware attack.
No one in the healthcare sector wants to see a massively disruptive incident like the Change Healthcare attack again, “but a lot of times it seems like lawmakers are reactive,” Ballard said.
In the wide-ranging interview (see audio link above), Arnone and Ballard also discussed:
- The likely fate of pending regulations and legislative efforts initiated in 2024, including an update to the HIPAA security rule, and President Joe Biden’s executive order on artificial intelligence;
- The significance of the Change Healthcare cyberattack on the healthcare sector;
- Other top healthcare cybersecurity regulatory and legislative issues to watch in the year ahead.
CHIME is a professional association of healthcare CISOs and CIOs.
Ballard is the director of congressional affairs at CHIME where she has led the group’s congressional policy initiatives for nearly five years. Prior to joining CHIME, Ballard served as Sen. John Kennedy, R-LA’s healthcare legislative assistant, where she played a key role in advancing the senator’s priorities on the Senate Budget Committee and the Senate Labor-HHS appropriations subcommittee.
Arnone, who leads CHIME’s federal affairs, has over 15 years of regulatory and legislative healthcare policy experience working on an array of health IT issues including telehealth, cybersecurity, medical device safety, Medicare payment programs, interoperability and HIPAA. With a specialized focus on digital health, cybersecurity,and artificial intelligence, Arnone advocates for the interests of healthcare IT leaders at the federal level.