⏳ Windows 10 Is Ending — What Small Health Care Organizations Need to Know (and Do)
On October 14, 2025, Microsoft will officially end support for Windows 10.
No more patches.
No more security updates.
No more compliance.
On October 14, 2025, Microsoft will officially end support for Windows 10.
No more patches.
No more security updates.
No more compliance.
If you're a health care IT manager, director, or executive in a small organization, you've probably been sold on an email system that is "HIPAA-compliant."
You might have even been sold on how “seamless” it is — with no portals or passwords required.
Sounds great.
But behind that smooth sales pitch, there’s often a very costly gray area — and it's small organizations that are poised to pay the price.
You’re a small health care provider.
Maybe a rural hospital.
Maybe a behavioral health clinic.
Maybe a specialty outpatient center.
Your team might be 50–250 people. Your IT department? One person, maybe two or three — or even just a managed provider on-call.
In small health care organizations, IT is often just one person — and they’re juggling everything. Security, compliance, backups, devices, email... all while chasing down printers and resetting passwords.
And the reality is, most of these orgs don’t get enterprise resources — but are still expected to meet enterprise-level compliance.
While headlines often focus on massive hospital systems, ransomware attackers increasingly target small clinics, practices, and rural hospitals — because they know one thing: