Poland’s SIGNIUS S.A. is making a move that is redefining the balance of power in the healthcare sector. With the implementation of an advanced infrastructure at AS Abrechnungsstelle Bremen – a key billing organisation in the German healthcare system – it is proving that Polish cryptography know-how is becoming an export commodity of first choice.
The German healthcare sector is currently undergoing a transformation driven by rigorous standards such as TR-RESISCAN. For institutions processing massive amounts of sensitive data, digitisation is no longer a matter of choice, but a condition for operational stability. The challenge is to automate the process without compromising document integrity.
The SIGNIUS Sealing Server solution, implemented in an On-Premises model, allows for mass, qualified document sealing directly on the customer’s infrastructure. This approach eliminates the reliance on external cloud providers, a definitive argument in the data-protection-conservative German environment.
The Polish company’s strategic advantage is based on delivering a complete ecosystem ‘from a single source’. The integration of the sealing server, HSM modules and eIDAS qualified certificates into one coherent system allows gigantic volumes of documentation to be processed without human intervention, while retaining full evidential power. This is not an isolated success; the company is already working with insurer AOK, which signals a wider trend: western European regulated entities are looking for agile, end-to-end solutions from central Europe.
The potential for further expansion is tangible. According to Bitkom’s Digital Office 2025 report, nearly half of German companies still see themselves lagging behind in the digitisation of processes, even though more than 90 per cent recognise it as key to cost efficiency. With increasing pressure to reduce paper and build an organisation’s resilience to crises, technologies that enable secure online archiving are becoming a cornerstone of modern business.
For SIGNIUS, success in Bremen is not only a closed project, but above all a strong foothold in the most demanding sector of Europe’s largest economy. In an industry where trust is the currency, the Polish supplier has just significantly raised its credibility rating.
