Abstract

Adopting IT as an integral part of business and operation is certainly making the healthcare industry more efficient and cost-effective. With the widespread digitalization of personal health information, coupled with big data revolution and advanced analytics, security and privacy related to medical data — especially ensuring authorized access thereto — is facing a huge challenge. In this paper, we argue that a fine-grained approach is needed for developing access control mechanisms contingent upon various environmental and application-dependent contexts along with provision for secure delegation of access-control rights. In particular, we propose a context-sensitive approach to access control, building on conventional discretionary access control (DAC) and role-based access control (RBAC) models. Taking a holistic view to access control, we effectively address the precursory authentication part as well. The eTRON architecture — which advocates use of tamper-resistant chips equipped with functions for mutual authentication and encrypted communication — is used for authentication and implementing the DAC-based delegation of access-control rights. For realizing the authorization and access decision, we used the RBAC model and implemented context verification on top of it. Our approach closely follows regulatory and technical standards of the healthcare domain. Evaluation of the proposed system in terms of various security and performance showed promising results.

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