Hospital
Security
Both publicly and privately, hospital
security has become a bigger and bigger issue in the past few
years. One of the primary reasons more focus has been placed
on security in American hospitals is because of liability: if a patient
is injured or documents go missing and the source of the problem can be
traced to lax security, then the hospital, not the patient, is
liable. Malpractice suits are already costing major hospitals
millions of dollars each year, and a few thousands of dollars in
security costs easily outweigh hundreds of thousands of dollars in
court costs.
Another reason hospital security has come into question is because
hospitals possess a great deal of personal information about their
patients. Medical records, social security numbers, billing
information, all of this personal information is filed away in
hospitals. With identity theft becoming more and more
prevalent, hospitals are beginning to realize the importance of secure
patient information. Often this prompts the implementation of
added electronic security measures including access cards and password
shits which change network passwords weekly or even daily.
These safeguards help protect information networks from both remote
hackers and internal employees who attempt to access information they
do not have clearance to view.
Of course, hospitals are repositories for large amounts of drugs,
including narcotics, depressants, stimulants, opiates, and hefty
painkillers. Some of these drugs are addictive, and many are
openly traded on the street. The security of prescription
medications has normally been the first major security investment most
hospitals have made, installing secure dispersion areas and barricaded
storage facilities for the serious drugs. These precautions
are rarely unwarranted; most hospitals have a few break-ins each
year.
Though it is rare, hospitals are sometimes the scenes of murders or
abductions, especially in maternity wards. In 1997 a newborn
infant was snatched from a hospital in southern England.
Similar incidents have prompted the installation of security cameras
and internal doors in maternity wards to ensure that hospital staff
know where people are and whether or not they belong in the ward.
Other hospitals have increased the number of guards and cameras onsite,
often installing metal detectors at the front doors. In the
end, physical safety depends on making sure nobody is outside of where
they need to be, and electronic security depends on a protected
password and access system to ensure that nobody has access to
information they are not authorized to have.
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