Medical Information Protected by Barracuda NG Firewall
Customer Company Size
SME
Region
- Europe
Country
- Germany
Product
- Barracuda NG Firewall
- Barracuda NG Control Center
Tech Stack
- VPN
- Firewall
Implementation Scale
- Enterprise-wide Deployment
Impact Metrics
- Cost Savings
- Customer Satisfaction
- Productivity Improvements
Technology Category
- Cybersecurity & Privacy - Network Security
- Cybersecurity & Privacy - Security Compliance
Applicable Industries
- Healthcare & Hospitals
- Education
Applicable Functions
- Business Operation
- Facility Management
Services
- System Integration
- Testing & Certification
About The Customer
The first organization in a German-speaking university with a focus on teaching and researching emergency medicine and medicine management was founded in 2002. The INM, Institute for Emergency Medicine and Medicine Management was established as an interdisciplinary clinical organization at the Munich University Hospital by the Bavarian Ministry for Science, Research and Art. This research work involves the analysis and assessment of high volumes of patients’ data, so protecting this is a matter of the highest priority. This can only be guaranteed by a security solution that meets rigorous standards.
The Challenge
An essential element of the scientific work at the INM is storage and processing of person and patient-related information. Very tight legal stipulations defined by the Bavarian and Federal Data Protection Acts must be adhered to when dealing with this sensitive data. All data protective measures must stand up to an intensive discussion and examination with the controller for data protection at the University Hospital in Munich. It soon became clear to those responsible for IT at the Institute that the existing firewall solution—a pure packet filter solution—could no longer satisfy the current technical security requirements under the existing conditions. The four-man IT department at INM managed by Dr. Marc Lazarovici, M.D. began searching for a suitable alternative. The IT Team initially defined the core requirements for a new solution at the beginning of the evaluation phase. The following criteria had to be fulfilled: Increasing security standards: In addition to meeting the strict data protection law stipulations, an effective solution was required to counter the diverse attack attempts and malicious code activities. It was clear at this point that the route which the Institute for Emergency Medicine had to follow was to move away from a pure packet solution and onto an application level firewall. Secured access to the Institute’s network via VPN: The 30 full-time employees and their external colleagues should have easy access from outside onto the Institute’s network, without compromising the security. Increasing failsafe security: The new system should have a redundant concept. Several physical computers in distributed premises should be used here.
The Solution
Following an intensive evaluation phase, Dr. Lazarovici’s IT department decided in favor of using a Barracuda solution. The Institute required a solution that would reliably guarantee that communications could continue running, even under difficult circumstances. The requirements also covered administrative efficiency increases with adapted management concepts. The Barracuda NG Firewall was clearly the best solution in all areas. The implementation of the Barracuda NG Firewall ran smoothly, despite some specific special issues which were inherent to the project. The transition to Barracuda NG Firewall took place simultaneously with a move to new premises by both the Institute and the computing center. However, the entire system had to remain constantly accessible and available throughout the entire transition. It was inconceivable that the system be down for a period of several hours. On the one hand, employees and students work continuously with the Internet and on the other, a high number of web servers were hosted in the Institute’s computing center, including the main server for teaching at the faculty of medicine. The old solution was still in operation while the new system was initially activated for selected parts of the network. Some VPN clients were also assigned to some testers. Since no problems arose during this test phase, the new system was transferred to the entire system in one major conversion process. This took place with a downtime of just a few minutes. The entire process, from the conception to the final transition, took three weeks.
Operational Impact
Quantitative Benefit
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