Understanding Cognitive and Behavioral Psychological Factors that Lead to Cybersecurity Breaches in Healthcare
Abstract
Healthcare institutions are prime targets for cyber-attacks due to their extensive repositories of sensitive patient data and essential operational systems. Human error frequently initiates security breaches in these high-stakes settings, exacerbated by cognitive strain, limited training, and inadequate system design. Research highlights that over 80% of such incidents stem from human-enabled errors, with factors like security fatigue and cognitive overload significantly influencing cybersecurity actions. Despite this, many organizations fail to address the complexities of human behavior in cybersecurity, relying instead on cursory training programs that overlook the nuances of human error. As cybersecurity systems grow more sophisticated, healthcare personnel face increased cognitive and operational demands, further heightening error risks. This study addresses this critical gap by examining the role of human factors psychology in cybersecurity for healthcare and advocating for scientifically grounded strategies that incorporate human behavior, decision-making, and error mitigation to enhance institutional resilience against cyber threats. KEYWORDS: healthcare cybersecurity, behavioral psychology, human factors psychology, cognitive psychology, human error in cybersecurity, cyberpsychologyPublished
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