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`A Strategy for Security of the Electronic Patient Record', A Griew, R Currell, IHI, University of Wales, Aberystwyth, 14/3/95

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An Update on the BMA Security Policy - Anderson (1996)   (3 citations)  (Correct)

....[72] and by Darley, Griew, McLoughlin and Williams on clinical confidentiality [24] These provided the background material on what problems arise in practice, and how the clinical professions expect them to be dealt with. The pioneering study of electronic patient records by Griew and Currell [30] was also useful; it showed how complex it is to build a policy model for a record containing components to which different combinations of clinicians would have access, and motivated the search for a simpler framework. The key idea was to assume that each record would have a unique access policy. ....

`A Strategy for Security of the Electronic Patient Record', A Griew, R Currell, IHI, University of Wales, Aberystwyth, 14/3/95


A Security Policy Model for Clinical Information Systems - Anderson (1996)   (33 citations)  (Correct)

.... is always a decision for the patient, and there is little correlation between the above list and patients actual priorities [CB95] An AIDS campaigner might consider his HIV status to be public knowledge, while a Jehovah s witness might consider even a blood transfusion to be profoundly shameful [GC95]. For this reason, patients must be informed of a care team s access control policy when they first enrol, and have the opportunity to restrict access further if they wish. Since consent must be voluntary, systems must be designed so that the standard of care received by patients who do not ....

....polyinstantiation, have an interesting counterpart in clinical systems. Where two records with different access control lists correspond to the same patient, should the existence of the more sensitive record be flagged in the other one This is a known dilemma on which there is still no consensus [GC95]. If the existence of hidden information is flagged, whether explicitly or by the conspicuous absence of information, then inferences can be drawn. For example, doctors in the Netherlands removed health records from computer systems whenever a patient was diagnosed with cancer. The result was that ....

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`A Strategy for Security of the Electronic Patient Record', A Griew, R Currell, IHI, University of Wales, Aberystwyth, 14th March


Problems with the NHS Cryptography Strategy - Anderson (1997)   (3 citations)  (Correct)

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`A Strategy for Security of the Electronic Patient Record', A Griew, R Currell, IHI, University of Wales, Aberystwyth, 14/3/95

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