University of East Anglia working towards 'break-through' encryption
It uses a maths technique called 'chaos theory'- which sees the access code constantly change, so it's nearly impossible to hack
Research from the University of East Anglia could transform how the NHS protects patients medical images from cyber-attacks.
It's believed this could be done by a new encryption method- which makes these pictures uniquely unpredictable and hard to access illegally.
Computer scientists there is describing it as 'a breakthrough way' to encrypt medical images such as X rays, CT scans and MRIs,
Which would help keep them secure even if hospital networks are breached.
UEA says that Medical imaging systems have been repeatedly identified as weak points, with many relying on legacy protocols that were never designed to be exposed to the internet.
The new encryption approach uses advanced mathematical techniques to make each protected image uniquely unpredictable and extremely difficult to hack, while still fast enough for everyday NHS use.
"Vulnerable UK healthcare systems"
Dr Hassan Malik, Associate Professor in Computing Sciences at UEA, said: “Over the past two years, multiple high profile cyber incidents - such as 2024’s Synnovis ransomware attack, which cost the NHS around £30 million and crippled pathology services - have revealed just how vulnerable UK healthcare systems remain.
“We designed image level protection so that even if attackers reach hospital systems, the images themselves stay protected. With our approach, every scan becomes its own fortress.”
How the new method works
Chaotic mathematics (chaos theory) describes systems that follow simple rules but react so strongly to tiny changes that their outcomes look completely random. The ‘Butterfly Effect’ is an example of this, where wingbeats in one place can cause a hurricane in others.
Dr Malik said: “Because of this extreme sensitivity, chaos creates patterns that appear unpredictable, which is why it’s useful in encryption, turning data into something that looks random and is extremely hard to reverse without the exact key.
“A major limitation of previous research solutions is speed - many are too slow for real time clinical use. Our new method is expressly engineered for NHS environments and can encrypt and decrypt images in around two-to-four seconds.”
In addition to this speed, the new method integrates with existing systems, works across image types such as x-rays and MRIs, is lightweight enough for hospital servers, and can handle high-volume environments, such as emergency radiology.
This allows trusts to add strong image level protection without redesigning existing infrastructures.
A difficult job for hackers
The chaos-theory-based encryption uses systems that behave in extremely unpredictable ways - making it hard for hackers to guess how an image is being scrambled, using techniques such as:
S-Boxes: special tables that decide how parts of the image are substituted during encryption. Because these S Boxes change each time, attackers can’t rely on fixed patterns to break the code.
Galois Field arithmetic: a type of mathematical system often used in cryptography. This helps mix and transform the image data in precise but very hard to reverse ways.
XNOR diffusion: a process that blends each pixel’s data with its neighbours. This ensures that even tiny changes ripple across the whole image, hiding any recognisable structure.
Next steps
The team is now preparing pilot deployments with NHS partners to assess how the system performs across different setups, understand its impact on day to day radiology workflows, and explore how it can be integrated with national cybersecurity guidance over the long term.
As this next phase begins, NHS trusts, imaging technology vendors and cybersecurity teams are invited to take part in shaping and evaluating the rollout