Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-2013
Publication Title
IEEE Security & Privacy
Department
Department of Computer Science
Abstract
Information technology (IT) has great potential to improve healthcare quality while also improving efficiency, and thus has been a major focus of recent healthcare reform efforts. However, developing, deploying and using IT that is both secure and genuinely effective in the complex clinical, organizational and economic environment of healthcare is a significant challenge. Further, it is imperative that we better understand the privacy concerns of patients and providers, as well as the ability of current technologies, policies, and laws to adequately protect privacy. The Securing Information Technology in Healthcare (SITH) workshops were created to provide a forum to discuss security and privacy for experts from a broad range of perspectives, from officers at large healthcare companies, startups and nonprofits, to physicians, researchers and policy makers.
DOI
10.1109/MSP.2013.104
Original Citation
Denise Anthony, Andrew Campbell, Thomas Candon, Andrew Gettinger, Carl A. Gunter, M. Eric Johnson, David Kotz, Lisa Marsch, Andrés Molina-Markham, Karen Page, and Sean Smith. Securing Information Technology in Healthcare. In IEEE Security & Privacy, December 2013. 10.1109/MSP.2013.104
Dartmouth Digital Commons Citation
Anthony, Denise; Campbell, Andrew T.; Candon, Thomas; Gettinger, Andrew; Kotz, David; Marsch, Lisa A.; Molina-Markham, Andrés; Page, Karen M.; Smith, Sean W.; Gunter, Carl A.; and Johnson, M. Eric, "Securing Information Technology in Healthcare" (2013). Dartmouth Scholarship. 3367.
https://digitalcommons.dartmouth.edu/facoa/3367