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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Security and Privacy Issues in Wireless Sensor Networks for Healthcare Applications

Moshaddique Al Ameen, +2 more
- 01 Feb 2012 - 
- Vol. 36, Iss: 1, pp 93-101
TLDR
A new field known as wireless body area networks (WBAN or simply BAN) has emerged to address the growing use of sensor technology in healthcare applications and security and privacy concerns are discussed.
Abstract
The use of wireless sensor networks (WSN) in healthcare applications is growing in a fast pace. Numerous applications such as heart rate monitor, blood pressure monitor and endoscopic capsule are already in use. To address the growing use of sensor technology in this area, a new field known as wireless body area networks (WBAN or simply BAN) has emerged. As most devices and their applications are wireless in nature, security and privacy concerns are among major areas of concern. Due to direct involvement of humans also increases the sensitivity. Whether the data gathered from patients or individuals are obtained with the consent of the person or without it due to the need by the system, misuse or privacy concerns may restrict people from taking advantage of the full benefits from the system. People may not see these devices safe for daily use. There may also possibility of serious social unrest due to the fear that such devices may be used for monitoring and tracking individuals by government agencies or other private organizations. In this paper we discuss these issues and analyze in detail the problems and their possible measures.

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Citations
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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A wireless body area network of intelligent motion sensors for computer assisted physical rehabilitation

TL;DR: A multi-tier telemedicine system that performs real-time analysis of sensors' data, provides guidance and feedback to the user, and can generate warnings based on the user's state, level of activity, and environmental conditions is introduced.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wireless sensor networks for personal health monitoring: Issues and an implementation

TL;DR: The authors' prototype sensor network for health monitoring that utilizes off-the-shelf 802.15.4 compliant network nodes and custom-built motion and heart activity sensors is described and the authors' solutions for time synchronization, power management, and on-chip signal processing are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

A survey of security issues in wireless sensor networks

TL;DR: This article outlines the constraints, security requirements, and attacks with their corresponding countermeasures in WSNs, and presents a holistic view of security issues, classified into five categories: cryptography, key management, secure routing, secure data aggregation, and intrusion detection.
Proceedings Article

CodeBlue: An Ad Hoc Sensor Network Infrastructure for Emergency Medical Care

TL;DR: The architecture of CodeBlue, a wireless infrastructure intended for deployment in emergency medical care, integrating low-power, wireless vital sign sensors, PDAs, and PC-class systems, is introduced and research challenges being addressed are highlighted.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Rise of People-Centric Sensing

TL;DR: In the MetroSense Project's vision of people-centric sensing, users are the key architectural system component, enabling a host of new application areas such as personal, public, and social sensing.
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