Delegation of access in an information accountability framework for eHealth
Author(s) -
Daniel Grunwel,
Tony Sahama
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
proceedings of the australasian computer science week multiconference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.1145/2843043.2843383
Subject(s) - delegation , delegate , ehealth , accountability , computer science , access control , health care , information system , knowledge management , business , computer security , internet privacy , process management , engineering , political science , law , economics , programming language , economic growth , electrical engineering
Shared eHealth records systems offer promising benefits for improving healthcare through high availability of information and improved decision making; however, their uptake has been hindered by concerns over the privacy of patient information. To address these privacy concerns while balancing the requirements of healthcare professionals to have access to the information they need to provide appropriate care, the use of an Information Accountability Framework (IAF) has been proposed. For the IAF and so called Accountable-eHealth systems to become a reality, the framework must provide for a diverse range of users and use cases. The initial IAF model did not provide for more diverse use cases including the need for certain users to delegate access to another user in the system to act on their behalf while maintaining accountability. In this paper, we define the requirements for delegation of access in the IAF, how such access policies would be represented in the Framework, and implement and validate an expanded IAF model.
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