Author_Institution :
Dept. of ECE, Purdue Univ., West Lafayette, IN, USA
Abstract :
Biological, chemical, and radiological agents can tamper with the activities of medical care providers, patient samples, and medicine administration. This results in a shut down of all medical care, leaving patients at a major risk. The technical challenge is to develop sensors to detect and monitor any violations in the medical care environment before threat to life occurs. Wireless devices must communicate multimedia data such as patient information, laboratory results, prescriptions, and X-ray and EKG reports. The reliability, security, and accuracy of these sensors and wireless devices can affect the timeliness access to information for patient monitoring. In addition, data can be corrupted, computer information systems can fail, and communication networks may experience denial of service attacks leading to complete failure of proper patient care. In this paper, we discuss security and safety issues in medical environment, the technology, types, and characteristics of sensors, and research issues in smart antennas, denial of service, fault tolerant authentication, privacy issues, and energy considerations. A discussion of sensors in patient rooms, clinics/wards, hospitals, and measurements of safety and security is presented. The available devices for sensor and wireless communication are also briefly included.
Keywords :
ad hoc networks; biomedical communication; biosensors; data privacy; health care; medical computing; multimedia communication; security of data; telecommunication security; wireless sensor networks; EKG reports; X-ray reports; communication networks; fault tolerant authentication; health safety; information access; laboratory results; medical care; multimedia communication; patient information; patient monitoring; prescriptions; service denial; smart antennas; violation monitoring; wireless communication; wireless devices; wireless sensors; Biosensors; Chemical and biological sensors; Communication system security; Data security; Information security; Intelligent sensors; Patient monitoring; Sensor phenomena and characterization; Wireless communication; Wireless sensor networks;