The Hack-Able Body: Medical Experts Say Fusion Of Humans And Medical Machines Could Leave Patients Vulnerable To Hackers, Digital Viruses, More

Tuesday, March 13, 2012
By Paul Martin

The hack-able body: Are device makers doing enough to shield patients from hackers?

by Arezu Sarvestani
MassDevice.com

The threat that the fusion of humans and medical machines may leave patients vulnerable to the hackers and bugs of the digital world is beginning to resonate with device makers.

Karen Sandler was 31 years old, working at a non-profit organization providing free legal help to computer programmers, when she was diagnosed with an enlarged heart and informed that she’d need a machine to help keep her alive.

Her mother accompanied her the day a doctor recommended that Sandler undergo surgery to implant a medical device into her chest. He handed Sandler a pager-sized machine called a cardioverter defibrillator – a miniature, implantable equivalent of having EMTs follow her around all day with defibrillator paddles should her heart stop.

The device was a round, metal compartment housing a tiny computer, an electrical pulse generator and a battery. Connected to her heart with metal wires, the device would monitor her heart rate and deliver an electrical pulse to shock it back to a normal rhythm should a mild burst of activity, such as hurrying across a street or running to catch a bus, over-exert her. Even as a self-professed “technology warrior,” the prospect of becoming part machine caught Sandler off guard. Computers crash, run out of power and succumb to hackers. Would becoming a “cyborg” ultimately count as an affliction or an upgrade? And could she really trust a machine with her life?

The Rest…HERE

Leave a Reply

Join the revolution in 2018. Revolution Radio is 100% volunteer ran. Any contributions are greatly appreciated. God bless!

Follow us on Twitter