Usable security and privacy: a case study of developing privacy management tools
SOUPS '05 Proceedings of the 2005 symposium on Usable privacy and security
Privacy in information technology: designing to enable privacy policy management in organizations
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies - Special isssue: HCI research in privacy and security is critical now
Evaluating interfaces for privacy policy rule authoring
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
An experimental economics approach toward quantifying online privacy choices
Information Systems Frontiers
HIPAA's Effect on Web Site Privacy Policies
IEEE Security and Privacy
The Journal of Strategic Information Systems
An Organizational View of Pervasive Computing
Social Science Computer Review
Precomputation of privacy policy parameters for auditing SQL queries
Proceedings of the 2nd international conference on Ubiquitous information management and communication
Evaluating assistance of natural language policy authoring
Proceedings of the 4th symposium on Usable privacy and security
Secure distribution of confidential information via self-destructing data
DNCOCO'09 Proceedings of the 8th WSEAS international conference on Data networks, communications, computers
PrIMe: A methodology for developing provenance-aware applications
ACM Transactions on Software Engineering and Methodology (TOSEM)
Designing natural language and structured entry methods for privacy policy authoring
INTERACT'05 Proceedings of the 2005 IFIP TC13 international conference on Human-Computer Interaction
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Increasingly, medical records are being stored in computer databases that allow for efficiencies in providing treatment and in the processing of clinical and financial services. Computerization of medical records has also diminished patient privacy and, in particular, has increased the potential for misuse, especially in the form of nonconsensual secondary use of personally identifiable records. Organizations that store and use medical records have had to establish security measures, prompted partially by an inconsistent patchwork of legal standards that vary from state to state. There is widespread appreciation among policy makers regarding the need for legal reform. The Health Information and Portability Accountability Act of 1996 mandated that the Administration develop regulations regarding the control of medical records. The Administration has offered regulations from the Department of Health and Human Services (Standards for Privacy of Individually Identifiable Health Information; Proposed Rule 45 CFR Parts 160 through 164). Survey data reveal what healthcare professionals who have access to sensitive medical records believe are the greatest threats to patients' privacy. The overlap between Administration proposals and the responses of healthcare professionals is striking.