Ivanti Neurons for MDM
Ivanti Neurons for MDM enables secure access to data and apps on any device across your Everywhere Workplace.
Founded in New York in 1887, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) is the leading medical research agency in the US. NIH oversees essential programmes that make important discoveries to improve health and save lives. NIH is made up of 27 Institutes and Centres, each with a specific research agenda that focuses on particular diseases or body systems. NIH also supports programmes that drive the collection, dissemination, and exchange of health information through medical libraries and the training of medical librarians and other health information specialists.
In 2012, NIH became a Ivanti customer to securely enable mobile devices and apps for employees who share and disseminate tremendous volumes of data. By 2018, Ivanti supported the agency as its only Unified Endpoint Management (UEM) platform provider. Over the years, the agency’s goals and government mandates have expanded and its infrastructure has become more complex. At each step, Ivanti has provided the flexibility to solve new challenges and help the agency improve operations across a highly complex medical research and healthcare infrastructure. Today, NIH gives thousands of employees seamless access to agency apps and services on secure mobile devices, which enables them to easily collaborate wherever they work using cloud services like Microsoft Office 365.
To increase efficiencies and employee collaboration, the NIH Office of the CIO and Centre for Information Technology (CIT) migrated the entire agency to Microsoft Office 365. As part of this effort, the agency wanted to integrate to a single mobile device management solution that would securely integrate into the NIH environment and O365. NIH took advantage of the Ivanti Access single sign-on (SSO) solution to enable secure authentication to Office 365. In a short period of time, the Professional Services team delivered a complete integration of Office 365 and Ivanti Access meeting the requirements of the NIH federated environment. The solution enables conditional access based on user, device, and application attributes to provide seamless and secure O365 cloud authentication for approved NIH users. Ivanti deployed this solution faster and more successfully than any other technology provider used in the past.
In addition to supporting SSO access to Office 365 on mobile devices, NIH also needed an easier way to provide secure authentication to web apps and internal mobile apps. Ivanti helped NIH to enable secure authentication through derived credentials, which provide a reliable, user-friendly, and compliant way for government agencies to enforce strong mobile authentication.
To do this, NIH uses PIV-D Manager, an innovative mobile application that transforms a user’s mobile device into a virtual smart card. This app provides a secure and NIST-compliant way for NIH employees to use their mobile devices to seamlessly authenticate to NIH websites and systems. Now, NIH employees no longer have to remember or type in complicated passwords to authenticate. NIH also reduces the risk of stolen passwords and phishing attacks that can trick users into revealing their credentials. The result is instant and secure access to NIH resources, apps, and collaboration services on any mobile device.
“As a technologist, the joke I always make is that the [Ivanti] derived credential solution works so well that it makes for a very boring demo. The solution is more user-friendly while being more secure at the same time — I see it as a win-win,” said Adam Miceli, a Microsoft Certified Solutions Master contractor at NIH. “Employees are often reluctant to enrol their devices into a UEM solution, but when they have seamless access to internal systems and data from anywhere without using a smartcard, they quickly change their perspective.”
Employees now securely authenticate to email, the intranet, and other applications using derived credentials on any mobile device such as an iPhone or tablet. This is because the encrypted AppConnect framework stores derived credentials so they can be shared for secure authentication to other AppConnect apps such as Email+, Docs@Work, and Web@Work on any iOS or Android device.
Prior to Ivanti, NIH used a telehealth system at the NIH Clinical Centres with portable workstations, but they were expensive and cumbersome to manage. Shortly after deploying Ivanti solutions, thousands of employees — from doctors and healthcare workers to researchers and clerical staff — could easily access most of the apps and data they needed from either a personally-owned or government-issued mobile device. Because Ivanti supports both Android zero-touch enrollment and Apple Business Manager (ABM), NIH administrators can quickly set up devices without requiring manual access.
NIH deploys various applications through the Ivanti Apps@Work enterprise app store. This includes an emergency notification app that instantly alerts users and provides instructions for safety precautions in case of emergency, such as a severe weather or other critical event.
NIH Clinical Centre also deploys secure healthcare apps to its hospital staff including physicians and nurses. The Sunrise mobile app allows healthcare workers to easily and securely access all electronic health records (EHR) from their Zebra Android or iOS mobile devices. This enables physicians and nurses to access detailed patient health data and insurance and billing information from any location. It also eliminates the need to instal bulky workstations around the hospital, which are often inconvenient to use and maintain.
NIH also pushes the Spok mobile app to physician phones through the Ivanti app store. Spok is a secure messaging app that NIH uses to send secure alerts and messages to on-call clinicians who may need to respond urgently to a change in a patient’s status. Spok also protects sensitive patient details with encrypted, traceable messaging among doctors and other staff members.
To help protect sensitive and confidential research and healthcare data on mobile devices, NIH first started deploying MTD on mobile devices just prior to the COVID-19 outbreak in early 2020. As soon as MTD was deployed to these devices, IT began receiving notifications about detected threats. Now, with more employees working remotely due to COVID safety measures, MTD adds an extra layer of protection to ensure that internal data is safe on employee devices no matter where they work.
Ivanti has helped NIH vastly simplify mobile workforce enablement. Today, the agency leverages capabilities such as instant device enrollment and configuration, passwordless access and multi-factor authentication with derived credentials, MTD, and secure access to Office 365 with SSO. As a result, NIH reduces the risk and hassle of passwords, remediates mobile device threats, and enforces security policies all while supporting a seamlessly productive and collaborative user experience on any device.
Note: A customer’s results are specific to its total environment/experience, of which Ivanti is a part. Individual results may vary based on each customer’s unique environment.