University of Minnesota launches center for medical device cybersecurity

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As technology continues to evolve, cybersecurity threats also continue to grow. And those threats have targeted medical devices that people use or have implanted. It’s why the University of Minnesota is teaming up with five local medical device manufacturers in a first-of-its-kind collaborative effort to ensure patients are safe.

Seventeen-year-old high school senior Finn Zellmer was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes five years ago. He now uses an insulin pump to regulate his blood sugar.

"This is the sensor for the pump, this is what reads the blood sugars and the glucose, and this is the insert where the insulin goes into the pump," he described.

It’s a technology game-changer for him, and one that keeps him healthy to play football, downhill ski and throw discus and shot put in track.

But he has thought about the possibility of his insulin pump being hacked.

"Phones get hacked, computers get hacked, entire databases get hacked, it’s always been in the back of my mind that someone could hack the pump for whatever reason," Zellmer shared.

The University of Minnesota is launching the Center for Medical Device Cybersecurity, after a request from medical device manufacturers.

Five major Minnesota device companies — Boston Scientific, Smiths Medical, Optum, Medtronic and Abbott Laboratories — have provided much of the funding.

"All of these devices are connected anymore, there just is not a medical device that is no longer connected, and if it’s connected, it’s at risk," said Mike Johnson, director of graduate studies for security and technologies programs at the U of M.

The center will focus on developing new research, technologies, education and training to address potential cybersecurity threats.

A new course being offered this fall has already gotten overwhelming interest, and so many people have registered that officials may have to cap the class at 50.

"My hope is we are able to do this several times a year because the interest is there, and if the interest is there, that means we are then getting the word out to all these companies and engineers that this is important," Johnson said.

He says cybersecurity threats are a growing concern that need attention and this is a great start.

"It’s a very large problem, and so having industry and academia work together to try to improve the situation is huge," he said.

For Zellmer, the center provides a sense of safety and security in an ever-changing cyber world.

"It makes me happy, it really shows that people are focusing on preventing bad things from happening," he said.