Social Science Computer Review
Secure Mobile Device Use in Healthcare Guidance from HIPAA and ISO17799
Information Systems Management
Hassle free fitness monitoring
Proceedings of the 2nd International Workshop on Systems and Networking Support for Health Care and Assisted Living Environments
A Conceptual Framework For Personalized And Mobile Health Care
Journal of Integrated Design & Process Science
A privacy framework for mobile health and home-care systems
Proceedings of the first ACM workshop on Security and privacy in medical and home-care systems
Enabling location privacy and medical data encryption in patient telemonitoring systems
IEEE Transactions on Information Technology in Biomedicine - Special section on body sensor networks
A modeling approach of web-based mobile parking guidance system and secured EHR in e-healthcare
Healthcom'09 Proceedings of the 11th international conference on e-Health networking, applications and services
Security issues in the development of a wireless blood-glucose monitoring system
CBMS'03 Proceedings of the 16th IEEE conference on Computer-based medical systems
Managing security and privacy in ubiquitous eHealth information interchange
Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Ubiquitous Information Management and Communication
Journal of Medical Systems
Privacy in mobile technology for personal healthcare
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
Security Challenges and Selected Legal Aspects for Wearable Computing
Journal of Information Technology Research
Information Resources Management Journal
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National health expenditures this year are estimated at about US$1.5 trillion, or almost 15 percent of GDP, by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (www.cms.gov). Thiscomprises the largest service sector in the US economy. Moreover, cost increases are outpacing general inflation, so the health care industry is again under pressure to become more efficient. These pressures--coupled with ready availability of personal digital assistants, wireless connectivity, mobility management middleware, and numerous medical applications--are driving very rapid deployment of pervasive computing solutions in health care. But as this article will show, these deployments must meet increasingly stringent privacy and security requirements that will be enforced in the coming year and beyond.