How to Choose the Right IoMT Security Solution in 2026
A practical guide for CIOs, CISOs, Information Security, HTM, and Clinical Engineering leaders to evaluate IoMT security vendors, avoid common pitfalls, and better protect connected medical devices.
Healthcare organizations are rapidly increasing their use of connected medical devices and IoT. At the same time, attackers are targeting these assets with ransomware, data theft, and operational disruption. Most of these devices cannot run traditional endpoint agents, which means that choosing the right IoMT security solution is critical.
Why download this guide?
– Healthcare IoT and medical devices are forecast to remain a top target for sophisticated cyber attacks through 2026
– Many devices ship with default or hard-coded credentials and have long lifecycles, making them difficult to patch or replace
– Security and HTM teams often have incomplete visibility into what is actually connected to their networks
Download Your Copy of the IoMT Buyer's Guide
What you’ll learn
How to assess true device visibility across clinical, IoT, and OT assets—not just what appears in CMMS or spreadsheets
Which risk-scoring and prioritization capabilities actually help you reduce time-to-remediate
Questions to ask vendors about network-based detection vs. endpoint agents for agentless devices
How to evaluate vendors on threat detection, anomaly detection, and workflow automation, not just inventory
A vendor-evaluation checklist you can reuse in RFPs and internal reviews
Why this guide from Asimily?
Asimily is ranked #1 by Gartner for medical device cybersecurity and is deployed at over 3,000 sites worldwide, including health systems such as MemorialCare and Methodist Healthcare
The guide condenses what Asimily has learned helping large health systems gain full visibility into their devices, manage vulnerabilities, and reduce cyber risk with less effort
Who should read this guide?
CIO, CISO, Manager of Information Security
Director of Biomedical Engineering, Clinical Engineering, Healthcare Technology Management (HTM)
IT and security leaders responsible for connected device risk in hospitals and health systems