N.L. cyberattack shows Canada needs national rules to protect personal data: experts
ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — The cyberattack on Newfoundland and Labrador’s health-care system is yet another urgent signal that Canada needs better rules around protecting personal health information from hackers and needs a unified response plan when health-care services are under siege, experts say.
Lives are at stake and action is needed now, said Paul-Émile Cloutier, president and chief executive officer of HealthCareCAN, a group representing organizations such as research hospitals and health authorities.
“I think that we’re about 10 years behind in looking at this in a very sophisticated way,” Cloutier said in an interview earlier this week. “And I think we need to put a lot of attention (on it), and it needs to be done immediately.”
Provinces follow individual standards for protecting personal health information, he said, adding that he would prefer to see national, standardized rules. “We need to develop a national strategy and really have a major, robust national response to protect our health-care systems across the country,” he said.