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EMR Project

EMR Project. Vanderbilt (Sztipanovits, Karsai, Xue) Stanford (Mitchell, Datta, Barth, Sundaram) Berkeley (Bajcsy, Sastry) Cornell (Wicker, Gerkhe, Machanavajjhala). Preamble . EMR is an integrative project for motivating, testing, evaluating core TRUST research areas in:

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EMR Project

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  1. EMR Project Vanderbilt (Sztipanovits, Karsai, Xue) Stanford (Mitchell, Datta, Barth, Sundaram) Berkeley (Bajcsy, Sastry) Cornell (Wicker, Gerkhe, Machanavajjhala)

  2. Preamble • EMR is an integrative project for motivating, testing, evaluating core TRUST research areas in: • Model-based design for security • Formal modeling, verifying and enforcing policies • Sensor networks • Investigate “best practices” for interfacing public policy to technology • We are fully aware of the fact that EMR is a huge area of research and EMR-TRUST is just one relatively small subproject in TRUST. We leverage our partnership with the Vanderbilt Medical Center to have a broader impact. • One related effort in the US is Microsoft’s Software Factory for HL7 compliant EMR transfer among providers.

  3. The Problem 2050 Percentage of Population over 60 years old Global Average = 21% Table compiled by the U.S. Administration on Aging based on data from the U.S. Census Bureau. United Nations ▪ “Population Aging ▪ 2002” • Rise in mature population • Population of age 65 and older with • Medicare was 35 million for 2003 and • 35.4 million for 2004 • New types of technology • Electronic Patient Records • Telemedicine • Remote Patient Monitoring • Empower patients: • Access to own medical records • Control the information • Monitor access to medical data • Regulatory compliance

  4. Challenges • Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) • HIPAA Privacy Rule (2003): gives US citizens • Right to access their medical records • Right to request amendments, accounting of disclosures, etc. • HIPAA Security Rule (2005): requires healthcare organizations to • Protect for person-identifiable health data that is in electronic format • Complexity of privacy • Variable levels of sensitivity; “sensitive” in the eye of multiple beholders • No bright line between person-identifiable and “anonymous” data • Complexity of access rights and policies • Simple role-based access control is insufficient • Governing principles: “need-to-know” and “minimum disclosure”

  5. Research Platform: Patient Portal • MyHealthAtVanderbilt is a web portal for an increasing number of services for patients. • Current capabilities include • appointment management, • secure messaging, • access to EMR and • billing • Future services will/may include medication management,patient data uploads, real-time datalinks and others..

  6. Overall Research Objective • Satisfying high-level requirements stated for • privacy, confidentiality, • integrity, • non-repudiation and • access control properties of information flows in the PP system. • Focus on system architecture and policy issues - leveraging existing security technology components.

  7. TRUST Research Effort in EMR • Architecture modeling and analysis • Policy modeling and analysis • Interfacing real-time patient data

  8. Architecture Modeling and Analysis Sub-Project • Architecture analysis is conducted based on the SOA architecture framework – natural fit to the problem and to the existing implementation of MyHealthAtVanderbilt • In SOA • Workflow modeling • Policy modeling • Data modeling • Service modeling is used to restrict and automate information flow in complex, dynamic environment.

  9. Research Approach • System Analysis • Risks and Threats Analysis • Policy Analysis • Domain analysis • VU Medical School • TRUST research groups (Vanderbilt, Stanford) • Domain Specific Modeling Languages • Domain Specific Policy Languages • Privacy preservation • Modeling • VU Medical School • TRUST research groups (Vanderbilt, Stanford, Cornell) • Fast prototyping • BPEL4WS tools • TRUST research groups (Vanderbilt, Stanford, Berkeley) • Mapping to target architecture -> recommendations

  10. Domain Analysis • Regular meetings with Medical School • Physicians • Medical Informatics Researchers • Software engineering staff • Privacy Officer • Information Security Officer • Architecture and policy discussions • Case studies • Brain storming sessions

  11. “Target” Architecture for Experimentation Partners • Standards: • BPEL • XACML • SAML • WS-Sec • … External Policy Enforcement Point PolicyDecision Pt. BPEL Process Manager Policy Repos. Configuration Engine • Target ArchitectureLimitations: • Modeling lngs? • Policy lngs? • Openness of architecture? • Tractability of analysis? PolicyDecision Pt. Internal Policy Enforcement Point S1 S2 Sn

  12. Modeling For Patient Portal Technology infrastructure: PP Domain • Workflow Models • Activities • Coordination • Service Models • Component Interface • Data Models • Policy Models • Access models • Privacy models Modeling Tools Analysis Tools Model Transformation Model Transformation Model Transformation Model Translators • Research Tasks: • Specification of modeling/policy languages • Model analysis/verification methods • Model translator specification • Case studies WSDL XACML BPEL4WS BPEL Process Manager Policy Repos. BPEL Infrastructure

  13. Modeling Challenges • Development of ”correct” abstractions • How to establish clear relationship among workflow, data and policy related abstractions?Examples:“ A patient is allowed to make appointment only for regular hours.”“ Physicians can access and modify medical records for those patients where they are the designated primary care physician.”“ A nurse can read medical records only in her specialization except when the illness is marked confidential.” Research approach: Formal specification, experimental evaluation and evolution of modeling languages.

  14. Modeling Tool

  15. Architecture Challenges • Privacy/security in open, dynamic architectures • Workflows are added and modified in the system. • Structure of information flows are dynamic, data dependent and complex. How can we guarantee and maintain privacy/security properties? Example: A new service added to the PP to provide relevant information for patients. Are there privacy leaks? Research approach: Data mining of audit files and discovering leaks, not-modeled information flows.

  16. Deliverables • Suite of modeling languages and tools • In-depth modeling of part of the PP and detailed analysis of security and privacy properties • Integration with Policy Languages component • Exploring privacy issues related to the research project (e.g. privacy leaks through access to audit logs.)

  17. Policy Modeling Subproject

  18. Interfacing Real-time Patient Data (See Professor Bajcsy’s Talk)

  19. Impact and technology transfer • Direct connection to a major Patient Portalresearch and deployment project • Results can be generalized to a wide range of SOA applications • MyHealthAtVanderbilt; ….

  20. How is TRUST making a difference here? • Vanderbilt, Stanford, Berkeley, Cornell • This project would be impossible withoutTRUST in every sense

  21. Education and Outreach • Immediate result of the unprecedented collaboration with the Medical School are: • consideration of a CS pre-med • joint projects • co-advising students • “TRUST Fellowship” for medical informatics Ph.D. candidates

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