Title: Remote Servicing under HIPAA with proposed Solution A
1Remote Servicing under HIPAAwith proposed
Solution A
- John F. Moehrke
- Chairmen of Remote Servicing Focus Group
- NEMA/COCIR/JIRA Security and Privacy Committee
- Systems Engineering Security and Privacy in
Healthcare - GE Medical Systems
2What you will learn today
- Remote Servicing is critical
- Remote Servicing presents new security risks
- Vendors are working on a common solution that
will - Reduce administration (Hospital and Vendor)
- Improve Accountability
- Provide a more secure environment
- Privacy is the Goal, Security is the way.
3Security and Privacy Committee (SPC)
- Joint effort by NEMA-MII, COCIR-IT, and JIRA
- Mission Ensure a level of data security and data
privacy in the health care sector that - Meets legally mandated requirements
- Can be implemented in ways that are reasonable
and appropriate - Reduces Healthcare costs of compliance
- Scope All systems, devices, components, and
accessories used in medical imaging informatics - Scope is not exclusive of other products and is
expected to be extendable to all Equipment that
maintains Patient Data (PHI) - International data security and data privacy
legislation, currently focusing on the European
Community, Japan, and the United States of
America
4Efforts of the SPC
- Educational Document
- http//medical.nema.org/privacy/education.pdf
- Remote Servicing Proposal (This talk)
- http//medical.nema.org/privacy/remote.pdf
- Audit Controls
- http//medical.nema.org/privacy
- Secure IHE Profiles
- Work in progress
- Members AGFA, GE, Kodak, Konica, Philips,
Siemens, Toshiba
5Why do Remote Servicing?
- Benefit to Health Care Provider
- Better Availability and Integrity of the systems
- Quick response as no Travel involved
- Higher quality of service
- Knowledge base available at the Vendor
- Expert can be applied to the problem/solution
- Benefit to Vendor
- Lower costs to service equipment
- More service offerings (preemptive diagnosis)
- Remote Service Centers (RSC) centralize knowledge
and expertise
6Remote Servicing today
Remote Service Center
Hospital Network
Vendor X
Vendor Y
Vendor Z
Modem Connections
Complex Wired Infrastructure
7Remote Servicing Solution
Vendor X
Vendor Y
Uses Hospital Network
Access points
Access points
Access points
Access points
Vendor Z
Ex. Internet VPN
8Access Control
Vendor X
1. Individual Service Personal
1. Individual Service Personal
1. Individual Service Personal
1. Individual Service Personal
1. Individual Service Personal
2. Device under service
2. Device under service
2. Device under service
2. Device under service
2. Device under service
2. Device under service
Vendor Y
Vendor Z
3. Access point Edges
3. Access point Edges
3. Access point Edges
9Audit Trails
Vendor X
1. Individual Service Personal
1. Individual Service Personal
1. Individual Service Personal
1. Individual Service Personal
1. who, what, where, when why
2. Device under service
2. Device under service
2. Device under service
2. Device under service
2. Device under service
2. when, and what
Vendor Y
Vendor Z
3. Access point Edges
3. Access point Edges
3. Session specifics where and when
10Health Care Provider gains Control and
Manageability
- Control of each session and/or vendor
- Rules that restrict where vendor X can go, what
tools they can use, when they can connect, etc - Strong Access Point Authentication
- Audit trails to prove accountability
11Next Steps for SPC ? Focus Group Charter
- Define a Reasonable and Practical solution that
follows this architecture - Candidate A -- IPSec tunneling over the
Internet - ESP/AH 3DES and SHA1
- IKE Session Key negotiation
- Certificates communicated out-of-band (mail,
courier, etc) - Filtering and Routing rules maintained by the
Healthcare facility - Audit trails maintained at RSC
- Individual Authentication maintained at the RSC
12Solution A IPSec on Internet
Vendor X
Vendor Y
Vendor Z
IPSec Tunnel, ESPAH 3DES, SHA1 IKE-RSA, PKI
out-of-band
13Conclusion
- The Focus Group is actively creating these
Descriptions of Candidate Implementations - Vendors are providing experts from their Service
organizations - AGFA, GE, Kodak, Philips, Siemens, Toshiba,
- Targeting End of 2002 with demonstration at RSNA
- Will seek approval by NEMA, COCIR, and JIRA early
2002 - Likely Vendor implementations mid 2002
14John F. Moehrke
- GE Medical Systems
- 262-293-1667
- John.Moehrke_at_med.ge.com