Moving to the Cloud: Why Cyber Security Matters More Than Ever for Dental Practices

News and Blogs

7th January 2026

Key Takeaways

  • Cloud systems are secure, but devices, users and email accounts remain the main risk
  • Non‑clinical data (HR, finance, referrals) often stays local and must also be backed up securely
  • Dental practices are prime targets due to sensitive medical, personal and financial data
  • Most attacks exploit human error such as phishing, weak passwords and unpatched devices
  • Compliance responsibility stays with the practice, not the cloud provider (GDPR, NHS Toolkit, CQC)

Across the UK, dental practices continue to move away from on-site servers and towards cloud-based systems such as Practice Management Systems, Digital imaging platforms and online patient records. This shift brings clear benefits: flexibility, reduced infrastructure costs and easier access to systems across multiple locations.

Cloud providers are correct in saying that a physical server is no longer required. What’s often misunderstood is that this does not remove the need for cyber security. In reality, it changes where the risk sits and increases the importance of protecting the practice itself.

Cloud Systems Are Secure — Access Is the Risk

Modern cloud platforms are built to high security standards. What they don’t protect are the devices, users and email accounts accessing them.

Every PC in surgery, every workstation at reception, every laptop used remotely and every login represents a potential entry point. Most cyber incidents begin here — not with the cloud software itself, but with a compromised device, a stolen password or a convincing phishing email. This is exactly where cloud-first practices need to focus their security efforts.

Clinical Systems May Be in the Cloud — Other Data Often Isn’t

While clinical records and digital imaging are increasingly cloud-hosted, they are rarely the only data a practice holds.

Documents such as HR records, staff training files, referral letters, scanned correspondence, financial spreadsheets, reports and locally saved images often remain stored on individual PCs, shared folders or legacy storage systems. This data is just as sensitive and just as important as clinical records.

If these files are only stored locally, they remain exposed to device failure, accidental deletion, ransomware and data loss. Moving to a cloud PMS does not automatically protect this information.

For many practices, the right approach is to ensure non-clinical data is also securely stored and backed up online. Common options include:

  • Microsoft 365 OneDrive for individual user files
  • Microsoft SharePoint for shared practice documents and collaboration
  • Secure online backup solutions for data that cannot be moved into Microsoft 365

The key point is not which platform is used but having clear visibility of where all practice data lives, not just clinical systems.

Why Dental Practices Are Actively Targeted

Dental practices hold a combination of medical, personal and financial data, making them attractive targets for cyber criminals.

Most attacks we see are not technically complex. They succeed because of phishing emails, reused or weak passwords, unpatched devices and human error during busy working days. Increased cloud connectivity can amplify these risks if security controls are not in place across devices, email and user access.

Compliance Responsibility Stays with the Practice

Whether systems are hosted locally or in the cloud, responsibility for data protection and compliance remains with the practice. This includes:

  • UK GDPR obligations
  • NHS Data Security and Protection Toolkit requirements (where applicable)
  • CQC expectations around information governance
  • Professional responsibilities for patient confidentiality

If data is lost, encrypted by ransomware or accessed without authorisation, accountability does not sit with the software provider, it sits with the practice.

How Microminder Secures Cloud-First Practices

As practices move away from on-site servers, security must focus on protecting people, devices, access and data — wherever it lives.

Microminder’s security services are designed specifically for this cloud-first reality and include:

  • Endpoint protection for every PC and laptop
  • Advanced email security to block phishing and malicious emails
  • Web protection to prevent access to harmful or inappropriate sites
  • Ransomware protection to stop data encryption or theft
  • User access security and monitoring to reduce the risk of account compromise
  • Secure cloud data and backup strategies for both clinical and non-clinical information

This layered approach reflects how dental practices actually operate today, not how they operated when everything lived on a single server.

Security That Supports Patient Care

Effective cyber security should protect without disruption. When implemented properly, it supports GDPR and NHS compliance, reduces downtime, protects patient trust and allows teams to work confidently with modern cloud systems.

At its best, security runs quietly in the background, enabling practices to focus on patient care rather than IT issues.

Final Thoughts

Cloud PMS and digital imaging platforms are now central to modern dentistry. As practices move away from on-site servers, security strategies must evolve accordingly.

The key question is no longer “Do we still need a server?”
It’s “Are all our users, devices and data — clinical and non-clinical — properly protected?”

That’s the question Microminder helps dental practices answer every day.

KP
Chief Technology Officer
Microminder

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