Last Updated: March 6, 2026 04:03 PM
What happens to patient care when your network goes down, and what can your IT team do to prevent it?
For IT directors and network administrators working in hospitals, clinics, and healthcare facilities, this is not a hypothetical question. It is an operational reality that unfolds with alarming regularity. Approximately 96% of healthcare organizations report at least one unplanned EHR downtime event within any given three-year window, and 70% of those outages last longer than eight hours — effectively wiping out an entire clinical shift.
The cost is staggering. The reputational damage is lasting. And the risk to patients is real.
Healthcare IT teams operate in one of the most financially punishing environments when it comes to network disruptions. The numbers speak for themselves:
|
Metric |
Cost Estimate |
|
Downtime + disruption-driven cost growth |
Up 11% year-over-year |
|
Disruption-related cost bucket |
$2.8 million |
|
Organizations reporting major operational disruption from a breach |
70% |
|
Typical recovery timeline |
Longer than 100 days for most breached orgs |
|
Organizations fully recovered |
12% |
|
Healthcare breach cost baseline |
$9.77 million |
Source: Ponemon Institute (2024), IBM Cost of a Data Breach Report 2024, HIPAA Journal
These are not edge-case scenarios. Ransomware-related downtime now averages 24 days per incident. The 2024 CrowdStrike incident alone disrupted digital services for nearly 34% of U.S. hospitals. A misconfigured AT&T network expansion blocked 25,000 emergency calls. Network failures in healthcare are systemic, frequent, and catastrophic.
Beyond the financial toll, network downtime directly threatens patient safety:
Understanding the root causes helps IT teams design the right defensive architecture:
Wireless backup connectivity is a redundant, geographically diverse data transmission path that activates automatically when a primary wired connection (fiber or cable) fails or degrades. In a healthcare context, it ensures that mission-critical applications — EHR systems, PACS imaging, telemedicine platforms, lab systems, and clinical communication tools — remain online and accessible even during primary network failure.
Unlike traditional redundancy approaches that rely on a second fiber line from the same provider (which shares the same points of failure), wireless backup uses cellular networks (4G LTE or 5G) to create a truly independent failover path.
|
Technology |
Latency |
Best Use Case |
Key Limitation |
|
4G LTE Cellular |
Low |
Most clinical applications, EHR |
Building materials can affect signal |
|
5G Cellular |
Very Low |
High-bandwidth imaging, real-time care |
Availability still expanding |
|
LEO Satellite (e.g., Starlink) |
20–40ms |
Rural clinics, tertiary backup |
Weather-dependent in some conditions |
|
GEO Satellite |
500ms+ |
Asynchronous data backup only |
Too high-latency for real-time clinical use |
|
Fixed Wireless / Microwave |
Very Low |
Campus-level private connectivity |
Requires clear line of sight |
For most healthcare facilities, 4G LTE and 5G cellular provide the optimal balance of latency, availability, and deployment simplicity. Clinical applications generally require latency under 100ms — a threshold that both 5G and LEO satellite meet, while traditional geostationary satellite does not.
Yes. Healthcare IT teams must understand two critical compliance frameworks that directly require network redundancy and continuity planning:
A wireless backup solution is not just the best practice – in many cases, it is a compliance obligation. Failing to implement adequate backup connectivity can leave facilities exposed to regulatory penalties on top of the operational and clinical costs of downtime.
Kajeet SmartFailover is an intelligent, managed wireless backup solution designed to automatically detect primary connection failures and switch mission-critical healthcare systems to a cellular backup network — often in sub-seconds, without dropping active sessions such as a telemedicine call or an active EHR record update.
Kajeet is a managed connectivity provider with deep experience in regulated industries. For healthcare IT teams, Kajeet provides not just hardware and connectivity but a fully managed service layer that reduces the operational burden on internal IT staff.
1. Continuous Readiness Monitoring
2. Automatic and Instant Failover
3. Business-Critical Traffic Prioritization
4. Intelligent, Multi-Carrier Wireless Connectivity
5. Staging, Kitting, and Provisioning Services
|
Healthcare IT Challenge |
How Kajeet SmartFailover Addresses It |
|
EHR goes offline during fiber cut |
Automatic failover to cellular backup in sub-seconds |
|
Single carrier creates a point of failure |
Multi-carrier intelligent path selection, no carrier lock-in |
|
IT team doesn't know about downtime until patients complain |
Continuous readiness monitoring with proactive alerts |
|
Limited IT bandwidth to manage backup hardware |
Staging, kitting, and provisioning handled by Kajeet |
|
Guest Wi-Fi consumes backup bandwidth during failover |
Business-critical traffic prioritization and usage controls |
|
HIPAA compliance requires documented contingency planning |
SmartFailover supports Emergency Mode Operation requirements |
|
Rural or multi-site facilities with inconsistent coverage |
Multi-carrier selection ensures best available path at each location |
Q: How fast does Kajeet SmartFailover switch to the backup network? Failover is automatic and occurs in sub-seconds, designed to keep active sessions — including telehealth calls and live EHR access — intact without clinician-facing disruption.
Q: Does wireless backup meet HIPAA requirements for healthcare connectivity? Yes. A properly configured wireless backup solution supports the HIPAA Security Rule's requirement for an Emergency Mode Operation Plan and Disaster Recovery Plan under 45 CFR § 164.308(a)(7). Kajeet's solution is designed with healthcare compliance requirements in mind.[KK1]
Q: What happens if my wireless carrier also has an outage? Kajeet's multi-carrier approach eliminates single-carrier dependency. The system intelligently selects the best available carrier in real time, so a single carrier failure does not take down your backup path.
Q: Is wireless backup fast enough for clinical applications like EHR and imaging? Yes. Clinical applications require latency under 100ms. 4G LTE and 5G networks readily meet this threshold, making them suitable for EHR access, telemedicine, and most diagnostic imaging workflows.
Q: How does Kajeet handle deployment across multiple clinic locations? Kajeet's staging, kitting, and provisioning services handle device configuration and shipping centrally, reducing the burden on your IT team. Devices arrive pre-configured and ready to install across all locations.
Q: Can Kajeet prioritize EHR traffic over guest Wi-Fi during a failover event? Yes. Kajeet SmartFailover provides complete visibility, control, and alerting for device and data usage, allowing IT administrators to define traffic prioritization rules that ensure life-safety systems receive bandwidth priority.
Ready to protect your healthcare facility from the cost and risk of network downtime?
Visit our website to learn more about Kajeet SmartFailover and speak with a healthcare connectivity specialist today.
Anastasia has been with Kajeet since 2023 and has been working in the wireless technology space for 4 years. She is a proud alum of the University of South Carolina (go Gamecocks!) and lives in Columbia, South Carolina with her husband and golden doodle, Millie.
