The correct answer is (B).
(B) Flaw
Step 1: Identify the Question Type
This question stem contains a slight modification of the very common Flaw question phrase "vulnerable to criticism."
Step 2: Untangle the Stimulus
The hospital executive concludes with the recommendation to make protection of client confidentiality the hospital's highest priority. The evidence is the assertion by several computer experts that unauthorized access to computer data is the most significant threat faced by large institutions, including universities and hospitals.
Step 3: Make a Prediction
It might strike you as odd that a hospital is prioritizing computer security over, say, saving lives, merely on the advice of computer experts. The computer experts' analysis of the threat of unauthorized access might be real, but their overall understanding of other threats facing hospital management is likely little to none. Otherwise, the basic test for Flaw question answers is to ask if the author actually does what the answer describes.
Step 4: Evaluate the Answer Choices
(B) is correct because it accurately describes the argument and its inadequacy. The argument relies on the guidance of experts whose expertise is in computers, not in overall hospital management. To accurately pinpoint the most significant threat faced by a hospital, an expert should have some experience in medicine and hospital administration.
(A) does not relate to the argument, which is focused on identifying the highest priority. The cause of unauthorized access to confidential data is not discussed, nor is a possible solution. Therefore, the executive can't possibly mix up those two.
(C) describes a classic causal flaw, which is not at play here. There is simply no evidence of two things being correlated nor a conclusion that one thing causes another within the argument.
(D) refers to a representativeness flaw, which is unrelated to this argument. According to this choice, the argument draws a general conclusion about a group; however, the hospital executive's conclusion is specific to his one hospital.
(E) also fails to describe the argument. The stimulus discusses large institutions only, not institutions in general. The computer experts' advice was for large institutions, such as hospitals, so the hospital executive was right to consider his hospital a proper target of the advice, but he was flawed in assessing the validity of the advice.