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Designing A Blockchain-Empowered Telehealth Artifact for Decentralized Identity Management and Trustworthy Communication: Interdisciplinary Approach.
Liang, Xueping; Alam, Nabid; Sultana, Tahmina; Bandara, Eranga; Shetty, Sachin.
Afiliação
  • Liang X; Florida International University, Miami, FL, United States.
  • Alam N; Troy University, Troy, AL, United States.
  • Sultana T; Troy University, Troy, AL, United States.
  • Bandara E; Old Dominion University, Suffolk, VA, United States.
  • Shetty S; Old Dominion University, Suffolk, VA, United States.
J Med Internet Res ; 26: e46556, 2024 Sep 25.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39320943
ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND:

Telehealth played a critical role during the COVID-19 pandemic and continues to function as an essential component of health care. Existing platforms cannot ensure privacy and prevent cyberattacks.

OBJECTIVE:

The main objectives of this study are to understand existing cybersecurity issues in identity management and trustworthy communication processes in telehealth platforms and to design a software architecture integrated with blockchain to improve security and trustworthiness with acceptable performance.

METHODS:

We improved personal information security in existing telehealth platforms by adopting an innovative interdisciplinary approach combining design science, social science, and computer science in the health care domain, with prototype implementation. We used the design science research methodology to implement our overall design. We innovated over existing telehealth platforms with blockchain integration that improves health care delivery services in terms of security, privacy, and efficiency. We adopted a user-centric design approach and started with user requirement collection, followed by system functionality development. Overall system implementation facilitates user requirements, thus promoting user behavior for the adoption of the telehealth platform with decentralized identity management and an access control mechanism.

RESULTS:

Our investigation identified key challenges to identity management and trustworthy communication processes in telehealth platforms used in the current health care domain. By adopting distributed ledger technology, we proposed a decentralized telehealth platform to support identity management and a trustworthy communication process. Our design and prototype implementation using a smart contract-driven telehealth platform to provide decentralized identity management and trustworthy communication with token-based access control addressed several security challenges. This was substantiated by testing with 10,000 simulated transactions across 5 peers in the Rahasak blockchain network. The proposed design provides resistance to common attacks while maintaining a linear time overhead, demonstrating improved security and efficiency in telehealth services. We evaluated the performance in terms of transaction throughput, smart contract execution time, and block generation time. To create a block with 10,000 transactions, it takes 8 seconds on average, which is an acceptable overhead for blockchain-based applications.

CONCLUSIONS:

We identified technical limitations in current telehealth platforms. We presented several design innovations using blockchain to prototype a system. We also presented the implementation details of a unique distributed architecture for a trustworthy communication system. We illustrated how this design can overcome privacy, security, and scalability limitations. Moreover, we illustrated how improving these factors sets the stage for improving and standardizing the application and for the wide adoption of blockchain-enabled telehealth platforms.
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Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Segurança Computacional / Telemedicina / Pandemias / Blockchain / SARS-CoV-2 / COVID-19 Limite: Humans Idioma: En Revista: J Med Internet Res Assunto da revista: INFORMATICA MEDICA Ano de publicação: 2024 Tipo de documento: Article País de afiliação: Estados Unidos

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Segurança Computacional / Telemedicina / Pandemias / Blockchain / SARS-CoV-2 / COVID-19 Limite: Humans Idioma: En Revista: J Med Internet Res Assunto da revista: INFORMATICA MEDICA Ano de publicação: 2024 Tipo de documento: Article País de afiliação: Estados Unidos