You likely mitigate external cybersecurity threats by backing up your data and improving your network security. You’ve probably also invested in physical security measures like cameras, metal detectors, public safety officers, and training.
But how well do these tactics prevent internal threats involving employee and vendor access? Let’s take a look at how inadequate key control intensifies three major risks to your facility and your patients.
According to DEA data, employee pilferage accounts for 22% of drug thefts or losses.
It’s not just data at risk, however. For example, two hospital employees and a medical supply distributor put the public’s health at risk when they conspired to steal medical devices and supplies from the hospital and sold them online. One of the employees used their access to the medical supply and the cleaning and disinfecting rooms at the hospital to steal the items. Some of the supplies had been used in surgical procedures and hadn’t been disinfected.
All of these examples demonstrate that employee accountability is critical to protecting patients.
Turnover and burnout has reached critical levels in the healthcare industry, with hospitals averaging 100% turnover every five years. Meanwhile, as staff struggle to cover essential patient care, other processes suffer. In a Campus Safety report, 76% of respondents said they don’t have enough staff to operate access control system(s) and/or locks.
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At best, this issue makes staff’s jobs harder when they don’t have access to areas or supplies they need to do their jobs. At worst, it leaves the door open for staff, contractors, or visitors to exploit key and access control vulnerabilities.
Some employees do have a legitimate need to access keys for areas where narcotics, sensitive data, or other sensitive assets are stored. But are you certain employees always use their keys for the authorized purpose? Can other employees gain access to those keys? Do you have a reliable process for retrieving keys when an employee resigns?
To protect your facility from liability and protect patients’ well-being, it’s critical to maintain employee accountability. The best way to do so is to create an automatic audit trail of key use that’s not vulnerable to human error or manipulation. Electronic key control systems help you meet this objective.
Unlike traditional key storage methods such as desk drawers or pegboards, electronic key control systems typically consist of a metal drawer or wall-mounted panel that physically locks down keys. Some even allow you to set up access levels to ensure that people are only retrieving the keys they need to perform their job duties.
In addition, if someone checks out a key outside their shift hours when they have no need to do so, or if they have a key checked out for longer than they should, you can be immediately alerted by text or email. The system is fully automated, so if a security incident occurs, the automatic audit trail can aid in an investigation by providing a report of who checked out keys and when.