Trustworthy Healthcare Ecosystem: Difference between revisions
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===Protection of the Patient Credentials=== | ===Protection of the Patient Credentials=== | ||
This is a requirement for IAL2. | This is a requirement for IAL2. | ||
* eg U2F or TEE | * eg U2F or FIDO (W3C Web Authentication) or TEE or Client to Authentication Protocol (CTAP FIDO?) | ||
===Biometric Factors=== | ===Biometric Factors=== |
Revision as of 17:02, 11 June 2019
Full Title
Examine the healthcare ecosystem from the perspective of a patient of that system.
Context
- The wiki page Health Care Profile establishes the context for this page.
- For a healthcare trust ecosystem to have value for a patient, these criteria are important:
- The patient can know that their medical and other records are safe within the provider's Electronic Health Record (EHR) database.
- The user can determine the trustworthiness of other providers that are seeking access to their medical and other records.
- what a doctor sees a patient for the first time with a chief complaint, there is no trust. The patient provides subjective information about his/her complaint and then the doctor does an objective (clinical ) exam which may or may not validate the initial complaint.. that is the start of a relational trust. If she/he has been a patient for a year + they become an established patient for coding purposes but I would not classify them as a trusted patient in being compliant in following through with a care plan that address their complain.
- TEFCA says that if the patient has a trusted identity the patient should be able to view that episode of medical care, as reflected in their medical record, online and be able to download it and and share it with others .... the latter is a trust as to who the person/patient says they are and is not the relational trust between a physician and patient.
Problems
- If PCP is the source of IAL2 authentication credentials to be used with other providers, can we provide the standards that would relieve them of liability for misuse?
- For IAL2 some means of protecting the patient authentication credentials must be available, e.g. FIDO U2F (Web Authentication) or the smart phone (with a trusted execution environment) itself.
- Medical records can apply to both state and transaction records.
- When the patient asks for records they have the right to get everything that is permitted by law.
- When a physician makes a referral they typical send the relevant information relating that condition (with patient consent).
Solutions
Relational Trust
The definition of (relational) trust is to believe in the honesty and reliability of someone or an entity you have known over time, made a good faith effort to live up to an agreement to fulfill their commitment, be it a contract or handshake agreement. ‘Trust’ is a transnational catalyst, the chemistry that initiates an interaction and reaction if not abused. (aka "known to the practice")
Online Trust
- Create standards that would leverage the IAL2 authentication with the PCP to build IAL2 authentication for use by other medical providers.
- In a digital economy, where online transactions are spontaneous, there is no trust in knowing who a user or entity is, so a measurable level of confidence must be determined instantly. This is a must if parties are to perform as expected in a digital exchange; an implied contractual agreement. This digital trust process underpins every digital interaction by evaluating a user’s digital identity attributes, with expectations of who that user or entity claims to be and if they will behave in an expected manner that represents their trustworthiness
Patient Consent
- Create a consent receipt for moving medical records from one provider to another provider.
- Patient understands what information they have consented to share and what the risks to the patient are. Also why the information is required to provide that care.
- Clearly a taxonomy for how to represent the information requirements and risks to the patient.
- When medical records come from the patient that consent would also be captured and given to the new provider.
- How to capture the patient consent in digital format and transfer that to another provider.
Protection of the Patient Credentials
This is a requirement for IAL2.
- eg U2F or FIDO (W3C Web Authentication) or TEE or Client to Authentication Protocol (CTAP FIDO?)
Biometric Factors
- Finger print
- Palm print
- Iris scan
- Behavior
Knowledge Authentication Factors (from KBA)
- Medical records
Federated Trust
- In a federated system there will be at least one trust anchor that provide trust certificates to the members of the federation.
Record Matching
No patient is fully trusted when approaching the receptionist or any health care provider beyond the personal physician. The essential problem is that mistakes happen in health care and the wrong records get attached to the wrong human being. This can cause disastrous consequences. Ensuring that the provider that is immediately attending to the patient have relevant information about the patient is essential to good outcomes.
References
- The wiki page Health Care Profile establishes the context for this page.