Protecting Patients, Ensuring Continuous Care: Building Cyber Resilience in Healthcare
This virtual roundtable brings together healthcare IT and security leaders to explore a pressing question: How do we protect patient care when disruption is no longer a mater of if, but when?

Cyber Resilience is Now a Patient Safety Issue
In healthcare, cyberattacks don't just disrupt systems - they disrupt care.
A single incident can delay treatments, compromise patient data, and erode trust in critical services. At the same time, healthcare organisations are under growing pressure to maintain always-on critical operations, meet strict regulatory requirements, and manage increasingly sophisticated threats - all within constrained budgets.
This virtual roundtable brings together healthcare IT and security leaders to explore a pressing question:
How do we protect patient care when disruption is no longer a mater of if, but when?
What We'll Explore
This interactive discussion will focus on practical strategies to strengthen resilience across clinical and data environments:
- Breaking the Cycle of Disruption - How can healthcare organisations move toward true cyber resilience and uninterrupted patient care - even under sustained attack risk?
- Aligning Security, IT and Clinical Teams - What does effective cross-functional collaboration look like before, during and after an incident?
- Lessons from Real-World Ransomware Events - What have recent attacks revealed about vulnerabilities in EMRs, PACS and other mission-critical systems?
- Securing Clinical Data Everywhere - How can organisations protect sensitive data across on-prem, cloud and SaaS environments while maintaining compliance?
- From Backup to Lifeline - How can immutable backups and modern data platforms enable faster recovery and more confident incident response?
Request your Invitation
This is a limited capacity executive discussion designed to encourage open dialogue and peer learning. Request your invitation to join healthcare leaders redefining cyber resilience to protect what matters most: patient care.