| Anderson R. J., Clinical System Security - Interim Guidelines, British Medical Journal, 1996, 312: p. 109 - 111. http://www.ftp.cl.cam. ac.uk/ftp/users/rj a 14/guidelines.txt |
....Anderson also gives a more 21 general discussion of the security issues in medical practice in the United Kingdom in [81] where he highlights examples of compromises of deployed clinical information systems. In an effort to deme a reference security model for clinical information systems [82], Anderson looks at the ethical basis of clinical information systems, looks at the threat model and defines a security policy. In his security policy [83] he proposes nine principles that should be in every system that will ensure medical systems match their off line counterparts. These ....
Anderson R. J., Clinical System Security - Interim Guidelines, British Medical Journal, 1996, 312: p. 109 - 111. http://www.ftp.cl.cam. ac.uk/ftp/users/rj a 14/guidelines.txt
....Anderson also gives a more general discussion of the security issues in medical practice in the United Kingdom in [81] where he highlights examples of compromises of deployed clinical information systems. In an effort to define a reference security model for clinical information systems [82], Anderson looks at the ethical basis of clinical information systems, looks at the threat model and defines a security policy. In his security policy [83] he proposes nine principles that should be in every system that will ensure medical systems match their off line counterparts. These ....
R. J. Anderson, "Clinical System Security - Interim Guidelines, " British Medical Journal, 1996, vol. 312, http://www.ftp.cl.cam.ac.uk/ftp/users/rja14/guidelines.txt, p. 109--11.
....with twenty thousand employees under a single departmental security officer; but the real world is not as tidy as this. 3.2 The second big problem with the GCHQ scheme Let us consider key management in medicine. This is highly topical given the debate on clinical confidentiality in general [6] [7] [9] and the NHS wide network in particular [4] 8] the latter prompted the Zergo report and appears to have hastened the publication of the GCHQ proposal. The Zergo report proposed that there be a single trusted third party to manage keys for the whole of the NHS, and even went into some detail ....
RJ Anderson, "Clinical system security: interim guidelines", in British Medical Journal v 312 no 7023 (13 Jan 1996) pp 109--111
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