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Beyond prevention: Protecting patient care through cyber recovery

Why cyber resilience now depends on restoring data quickly, accurately, and in compliance with pati…
Beyond prevention: Protecting patient care through cyber recovery

Why cyber resilience now depends on restoring data quickly, accurately, and in compliance with patient care demands.

Cyberattacks in healthcare can be operational crises that disrupt care delivery, delay procedures, and put patient safety at risk. As ransomware and data breaches continue to escalate, healthcare leaders are being forced to rethink what resilience actually means in practice.

For years, resilience was defined largely by prevention. But in healthcare environments shaped by legacy systems, complex clinical applications, and strict regulatory requirements, prevention alone is insufficient. Organizations now have to assume disruption will occur. The real measure of resilience is how quickly and safely they can recover.

That change reflects the reality of healthcare data environments, which are uniquely complex. Many organizations are still running legacy applications that support critical workflows, while also managing the fallout from years of mergers and acquisitions that have left behind fragmented systems and inconsistent data architectures. At the same time, many critical applications do not have well-defined recovery objectives, leaving significant gaps when incidents occur. 

In this context, recovery speed and data integrity carry far greater consequences than in most other industries. Delays are more than an inconvenience and can directly impact clinical decision-making and, in extreme cases, patient outcomes.

Restoring systems quickly is essential, but doing it correctly is just as critical. Inaccurate or incomplete data introduces new risks at the exact moment organizations are trying to stabilize operations.

Where healthcare resilience breaks down

While infrastructure or data may be recoverable in theory, executing recovery in a way that maintains compliance and protects sensitive patient data is far more difficult.

The challenges are layered. Limited budgets and staffing make it difficult to build and maintain robust recovery strategies. Data itself is highly complex, spanning structured and unstructured formats across diverse systems. And acquired datasets from mergers often arrive with limited documentation and immature architectures, creating ongoing operational friction. 

These issues are compounded by broader industry pressures. Healthcare providers are expected to modernize infrastructure, adopt cloud technologies, and improve efficiency while operating under tight financial constraints. Legacy systems slow down progress, but replacing them introduces new risks, particularly when recovery processes are not fully aligned across environments. As a result, the traditional separation between backup, security, and compliance is breaking down.

Forward-thinking organizations are moving toward a more integrated model that brings these functions together into a unified recovery strategy.

According to the most recent FBI annual internet crime report, criminals are posing as legitimate health insurers and fraud investigators to commit health care fraud. The FBI determined that the sectors most impacted by ransomware are healthcare and public health.

This is where the combined strengths of Cognizant and Rubrik become most compelling. Cognizant brings deep healthcare domain expertise and a proven track record in designing infrastructure strategies that address regulatory, operational, and clinical realities. Rubrik complements this with advanced capabilities in cyber recovery, sensitive data discovery, and ransomware resilience. Together, they enable a fundamental shift — from reactive backup management to a proactive, application-led recovery model — spanning multi-cloud environments and helping healthcare organizations restore critical systems rapidly, while preserving data integrity and maintaining compliance.

Over the next year, healthcare IT leaders must prioritize resilience and treat it as both a cyber and data challenge. That means adopting solutions that support faster implementation, tighter operational control, and measurable ROI.

Also, they must build recovery strategies that can withstand real-world disruption without compromising patient care — because in healthcare, resilience is about maintaining trust and ensuring that care can continue under pressure.

Discover how Cognizant and Rubrik are helping healthcare organizations recover faster, stay compliant, and keep patient care moving forward.

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