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UA Leading National Effort To Prevent Hackers From 'Medjacking'

intravenous drug pump
(Photo by Philip Dean - CC BY 2.0)
Connected devices, such as intravenous drug pumps and pacemakers, can be prone to tampering.

We’re all aware that our business and social lives can be hijacked electronically. The University of Arizona is leading national efforts to make sure human medical devices are safe from remote tampering.

We regularly hear reports of people’s personal information being stolen, and of bank and social media accounts being hacked. While it sounds like a plot line from a medical or crime drama, the potential for "medjacking" — or malicious medical device hacking — is real.

The University of Arizona is involved in creating strategies to protect connected devices, such as intravenous drug pumps and pacemakers, from tampering.

Physician David Armstrong’s research on regulating wireless medical devices led to the formation of a committee that includes the Department of Homeland Security, the National Institutes of Health and several other federal agencies and major health industry companies.

"The goal ultimately is to get out in front of this problem so that science fiction stays science fiction," Armstrong said.

Armstrong, a surgery professor, said the cyber security committee will look at how key elements embedded in medical devices can be less susceptible to failure or malicious or unintentional breech.

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Sara Hammond was a reporter at Arizona Public Media in Tucson from 2015 to 2018.