Building a Secure and Resilient Healthcare Cloud for Operational Readiness

by Rich Fletcher, Global Marketing Director – Healthcare, Rackspace Technology

Medical staff working in computers

Why leading healthcare teams improve uptime, strengthen defenses and support continuous operations in high-risk environments.

Healthcare organizations are adapting to a changing threat landscape. Cyberattacks are becoming more frequent and sophisticated, often targeting patient data and critical systems. At the same time, clinical operations depend on consistent system availability.

This creates a structural challenge: systems must remain secure while staying fully operational under pressure.

Yet readiness has not kept pace with risk. The 2026 Rackspace Healthcare Cloud Report, From Cloud Adoption to Cloud Advantage in Healthcare, shows that only 4% of organizations are extremely confident in their ability to protect patient data and systems from a cyberattack. Just 6% report a fully integrated and regularly tested cyber resilience posture.

This gap extends beyond security. When resilience breaks down, operations follow.

Security shapes cloud strategy

In healthcare, security and compliance requirements directly influence how cloud environments are designed and managed. Decisions about where workloads run often center on risk exposure and regulatory constraints.

More than half of organizations cite data security and compliance as the primary reason for moving or repatriating workloads across cloud environments or back on-premises.

These decisions are often made incrementally, without a unified strategy. Over time, that can lead to fragmented environments where workloads span multiple platforms with inconsistent controls.

The result is added complexity. Systems become harder to manage, visibility decreases and risk becomes more difficult to contain.

Fragmentation increases operational risk

Many healthcare organizations still rely on reactive security models that prioritize response over prevention and recovery.

The report highlights the impact:

  • Only 6% of organizations have a fully integrated resilience strategy
  • Many rely on partial or ad hoc recovery processes

These gaps show up operationally:

  • Longer recovery times after incidents
  • Increased downtime for critical systems
  • Greater financial and reputational exposure

In clinical environments, delays in system availability can affect care delivery. Resilience directly influences operational continuity.

What Cloud Leaders do differently

Cloud Leaders distinguish themselves by embedding resilience into daily operations rather than treating it as a separate recovery function. Their environments are designed to maintain continuity, reduce operational disruption and support faster recovery when incidents occur.

The report shows that 44% of Cloud Leaders have either a fully integrated cyber resilience strategy or coordinated recovery plans supported by regular testing.

These organizations strengthen operational readiness through four core resilience capabilities:

Proactive threat detection

Advanced tools, including AI-based monitoring, help identify anomalies early and reduce response time before issues escalate into larger operational disruptions.

Integrated resilience planning

Disaster recovery is built into cloud strategy through defined processes, regular testing and automation that support continuity during outages or cyber incidents.

Access control and governance

Identity, access and data protection controls are applied consistently across environments to reduce exposure and improve visibility across increasingly complex cloud estates.

Continuous evaluation

Security posture is continuously reviewed and adjusted as threats evolve, helping organizations adapt more effectively to changing operational and security demands.

Together, these capabilities help healthcare organizations maintain uptime, reduce operational strain during incidents and support more consistent continuity of care.

Resilience supports operational performance

Security is often evaluated through the lens of risk reduction. In healthcare environments, resilience plays a broader operational role. The ability to maintain continuity during cyber incidents, outages or infrastructure failures directly affects how consistently clinicians, staff and patients can rely on critical systems.

When resilience is built into cloud operations from the beginning, organizations are better positioned to sustain care delivery under pressure rather than simply recover after disruption occurs. That operational stability becomes increasingly important as healthcare environments grow more distributed and dependent on interconnected digital systems.

Organizations with mature resilience capabilities are typically better able to:

  • Reduce unplanned downtime across critical systems
  • Recover more quickly from incidents and operational disruptions
  • Maintain confidence in system availability during periods of stress
  • Limit the downstream operational impact of outages on clinical and administrative teams

The difference becomes especially visible during high-pressure events. Organizations with stronger resilience models can isolate issues, maintain essential operations and restore services with less disruption to care delivery. Organizations with weaker resilience strategies often face cascading operational strain, prolonged recovery timelines and growing financial and reputational exposure.

In this context, resilience supports more than infrastructure performance. It helps create the operational consistency healthcare organizations depend on to deliver care reliably.

The investment gap

Despite rising threats, investment levels do not always reflect urgency. The report shows that 41% of organizations expect cybersecurity investment to remain flat or decrease over the next 12-24 months.

This creates a mismatch between risk exposure and preparedness.

Cloud Leaders prioritize targeted investments that strengthen resilience at scale:

  • AI-driven threat detection
  • Regular disaster recovery testing
  • Identity and access management
  • Workforce training and awareness

These investments support continuity as much as protection.

Resilience supports operational performance

Security is often evaluated through the lens of risk reduction. In healthcare environments, resilience plays a broader operational role. The ability to maintain continuity during cyber incidents, outages or infrastructure failures directly affects how consistently clinicians, staff and patients can rely on critical systems.

When resilience is built into cloud operations from the outset, organizations are better positioned to sustain care delivery under pressure rather than simply recover after a disruption. That operational stability becomes increasingly important as healthcare environments grow more distributed and dependent on interconnected digital systems.

Organizations with mature resilience capabilities are typically better able to:

  • Reduce unplanned downtime across critical systems
  • Recover more quickly from incidents and operational disruptions
  • Maintain confidence in system availability during periods of stress
  • Limit the downstream operational impact of outages on clinical and administrative teams

The difference becomes especially visible during high-pressure events. Organizations with stronger resilience models can isolate issues, maintain essential operations and restore services with less disruption to care delivery. Organizations with weaker resilience strategies often face cascading operational strain, prolonged recovery timelines and growing financial and reputational exposure.

In this context, resilience supports more than infrastructure performance. It helps create the operational consistency healthcare organizations depend on to deliver care reliably.

What this means for healthcare leaders

Security and resilience now influence how effectively healthcare systems operate. The focus extends beyond risk reduction to maintaining continuity under pressure.

Organizations that integrate security into their cloud strategy improve their ability to withstand disruption and recover quickly when incidents occur.

Cloud Leaders show that this level of readiness is achievable. By aligning security, resilience and cloud strategy, they create more stable and predictable operating environments.

In healthcare, that stability supports both operational efficiency and patient care.

Take the next step

Read more in the 2026 Research Report: From Cloud Adoption to Cloud Advantage in Healthcare.

 

Tags: