UEM automation for healthcare: Just what the IT doctor ordered
IT admins everywhere share many of the same day-to-day challenges. But healthcare IT is – in a word – different. Pervasive cybersecurity risks, staffing and budget cutbacks, regulatory compliance, and accelerating adoption of new technologies are placing intense demands on healthcare IT admins and making UEM automation more important than ever.
Short & sweet
- IT admins in healthcare face unique challenges related to endpoint reliability and security, the sensitive nature of healthcare data, and increasing network complexity in an intensely demanding IT environment.
- Healthcare organizations are grappling with financial pressures, IT staffing needs and multiple digital transformation initiatives.
- IT admins in healthcare need a multi-layered security approach using modern tools that can automate endpoint protection tasks, simplify regulatory compliance, manage and secure mobile devices, and improve system reliability.
IT admins at healthcare organizations deal with many of the same day-to-day challenges that their colleagues in other business sectors do. While the demands of managing hardware and software, distributing updates and patches, monitoring system reliability, and integrating diverse devices are similar, they also differ due to the unique operating conditions and requirements of the healthcare industry:
- Compliance with strict data protection and privacy regulations such as HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act).
- Highly sensitive patient and financial data that is frequently targeted by cybercriminals for damaging ransomware attacks.
- A reliance on legacy systems and medical devices which may lack updates or are incompatible with modern security protocols.
- Incomplete network visibility for clinical systems
- Frequent provisioning and re-provisioning of devices for travel nurses and other visiting clinicians.
- Increasing use of personal mobile devices in patient care.
- Multiple connections to external third-party suppliers and partners.
- Accelerating adoption of new telehealth, remote patient monitoring, AI, interoperability and data sharing technologies.
- Financial pressures and a lack of qualified IT staff.
- A user base with high expectations for system reliability and low tolerance of downtime for IT maintenance.
UEM automation as an IT force multiplier
Unified Endpoint Management (UEM) systems such as the baramundi Management Suite (bMS) provide significant advantages for
healthcare IT admins by enabling them to automate device management tasks and set and enforce consistent security policies for all devices and locations from a centralized and
intuitive admin interface. Automation also makes it possible even for small IT teams to handle multiple routine tasks while freeing time for optimizing system uptime and
reliability and high-priority digital transformation projects. That’s increasingly important given the shortage of qualified IT personnel, the accelerating
deployment of telehealth, patient engagement and AI solutions, and the growing importance of system interoperability and secure data-sharing initiatives.
A core feature of the bMS is intuitive drag-and-drop scripting that makes it easy to automate nearly every routine endpoint maintenance task, especially distribution of
updates for current and legacy versions of Windows and patches for third-party software packages. IT admins can even automate deployment of updates for specialized and other software
packages for which vendors did not provide automated installers. The timing and scope of updates can be precisely defined to minimize or avoid user interruptions. In addition, self-service
kiosks can be set up with pre-configured software that users can install as needed.
As part of a multi-layered security strategy, the bMS provides comprehensive vulnerability scanning, centralized control of Windows data encryption and antivirus software, and regular IT
asset inventory updates. Up-to-date and accurate inventories significantly improve network visibility for non-standard medical devices. Automatic inventories also make it much easier to
identify systems needing updates, to reduce spending on underutilized assets, and to detect and remove unauthorized hardware and software.
UEM solutions integrate mobile device management tools such as containerization, remote wiping and app block and allow lists that are essential for enabling clinicians to use personal
devices to access electronic health records (EHRs) while maintaining privacy and security. Newer versions of the bMS also address increasing device diversity with tools for
managing specialized devices using the Linux OS.
Making sure that things “just work”
Clinicians and healthcare administrators have little interest in the challenges facing IT admins, and even less tolerance of endpoint performance and reliability issues. They expect
hardware and software to “just work.” Slowdowns, hangs or crashes can produce a flood of support tickets which IT staff must take time to address and resolve quickly. The bMS addresses this
problem directly with the baramundi Argus Experience (bEX), a digital
employee experience (DEX) solution for spotting, analyzing and fixing common endpoint performance issues proactively, even before users can submit a support request. That means
better end-user productivity and satisfaction and more time for IT teams to reduce backlogs, optimize network performance and implement strategic projects.
Hospitals across Europe have relied on baramundi solutions since the company’s founding nearly 25 years ago. Adoption in the U.S. is growing due to the need for a comprehensive, unified
platform to manage, secure, and monitor all devices used at healthcare organizations today. baramundi also is gaining visibility for its hands-on consultative approach to meet customers’
specific needs when implementing the bMS, and for its highly responsive and expert technical support which Forrester has described as “outstanding.” Learn more about tools and automation for healthcare providers today.