Industry Challenges
Healthcare organizations in Canada face a uniquely dangerous threat landscape. Patient records contain the trifecta attackers prize most: personal identity data, financial information, and medical history. Unlike a stolen credit card number that can be replaced, a compromised health record is permanent — and its value on the dark web reflects that, fetching 10 to 40 times the price of a financial credential.
How we Protect Healthcare Institutions
Managed IT Services
EMR systems are the backbone of patient care — and the #1 target on your network. We manage your clinical IT environment end-to-end: system hardening, patching, endpoint management, and 24/7 helpdesk — keeping EMRs, lab systems, and clinical applications running so your staff focuses on patients, not IT tickets.
Network Security
Medical devices, EMR servers, lab equipment, admin workstations, and guest Wi-Fi cannot live on a flat network. We architect healthcare networks with microsegmentation that isolates clinical systems from administrative traffic, contains IoMT devices in dedicated zones, and ensures a compromised billing workstation can never reach diagnostic imaging or patient records.
Regulatory Compliance
PHIPA breach notification to the IPC, PIPEDA obligations, OntarioMD standards, and HIPAA alignment for US-facing programs — healthcare compliance is layered and unforgiving. We manage Privacy Impact Assessments, maintain your breach response playbook, and ensure your technical controls satisfy each framework so that compliance is continuous, not a last-minute exercise before an audit.
Disaster Recovery
A prolonged IT outage in healthcare isn’t an inconvenience — it’s cancelled surgeries, delayed chemotherapy, and diverted ambulances. We build and tabletop-test clinical continuity plans with your leadership so that when an incident occurs, your team executes a rehearsed plan — not an improvised paper-based scramble.
The Newfoundland & Labrador Health Cyberattack — When Ransomware Cancels Surgeries
This was not a small clinic or a single-site operation. It was the entire healthcare infrastructure of a Canadian province — multiple hospitals, thousands of employees, and hundreds of thousands of patients depending on uninterrupted access to care.



