What Startups Should Know Before Building Their Own EHR
They bring us in for something simple: just help them clean up their project management flow. A small engagement. Low stakes.
They bring us in for something simple: just help them clean up their project management flow. A small engagement. Low stakes.
They bring us in for something simple: just help them clean up their project management flow. A small engagement. Low stakes.
They bring us in for something simple: just help them clean up their project management flow. A small engagement. Low stakes.
They bring us in for something simple: just help them clean up their project management flow. A small engagement. Low stakes.
Whether you’re selling to a hospital, a digital health platform, or a Fortune 100 buyer, security due diligence is not optional. The bigger the client, the harder they scrutinize. If you can’t prove you’re secure and compliant, that deal may never see daylight.
If you’ve spent five minutes with any healthtech founder, you’ve probably heard it:
“Which compliance framework am I supposed to worry about first?”
They bring us in for something simple: just help them clean up their project management flow. A small engagement. Low stakes.
They bring us in for something simple: just help them clean up their project management flow. A small engagement. Low stakes.
Whether you’re selling to a hospital, a digital health platform, or a Fortune 100 buyer, security due diligence is not optional. The bigger the client, the harder they scrutinize. If you can’t prove you’re secure and compliant, that deal may never see daylight.
In 2020, one of the most devastating breaches in health tech history occurred. A psychotherapy company in Europe was hacked, and over 33,000 private therapy session notes were stolen. The attacker didn’t just leak the data; they attempted to extort individual patients. Some stories linked to this breach ended in tragedy, including multiple suicides.