Online and Digital Identification, Securing Web 2.0, PKI and Digital Certificates

FIPS 201 for health credentials

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Interoperability among health care providers, payers and patients provides a great use case for high assurance interoperable credentials. Health care is a perfect use case for an identity credential and is a great opportunity to use the new PIV-I specification.

Any investment in health care IT has to realize this. Health care needs strong identity assurance yet most systems in the U.S. don’t make the investment in an identity infrastructure. The United States government needs to invest in infrastructure to identity management/privacy and civil liberties.

Some organizations have begun this, Mt. Sinai being a leader. Many countries have also done this; the U.S. has not. Unless the U.S. invests in strong identity, we won’t get the cost saving or improve health care and the U.S. will continue to be a laggard.


Please don’t give me another ID card, Web account, user name and password. Even scarier don’t accept federated IDs that don’t have any way of knowing who is establishing the accounts. Don’t make me get more certificates either. Can someone commit to identity infrastructure as part of the Health IT stimulus? That’s the gist of this.

IDmachines supports the efforts of the Smart Card Alliance and the Secure ID Coalition when they combined to deliver message that strong identity matters for any health IT effort at National Press Club briefing in Washington DC.

Credentialing matters when millions of individuals are involved in a program, surely this is the case as state and national health insurance programs grow. Strong privacy and security, interoperability and multi-use would be good things to have in a credential.

I don’t see any in the health market place. I access my health accounts (also Microsoft and Google “Vaults”) with user name and password or a bar code/number at a desk. Why can’t I use my government issued digital ID to log into these sites?

These are strong assurance credentials, background investigation and breeder document checks. The process is well defined and in my case the issuance procedures worked. I want to be able to use it. Organizations can have greater assurance of my identity when I use it.

I have an ability to logon, digitally sign communications and encrypt sensitive information. Please spare me from my endless usernames and passwords and changing them on a frequent basis, what a pain. Give me my PIN and biometric and chip and certificate(s) private key’s that I use for everything. Sounds uber-tech, well it’s the way in dozens of countries.

Estonia, despite - or maybe as a result of - getting cyber attacked is making a renewed investment. As I said, dozens of large scale programs including England, Italy, Belgium, Austrian health cards, German health cards, Brisbane driver license, Angola, Nigeria, Ivory Coast, it’s a long list. A lot of places are making the identity investment that will then be leveraged.

In the United States without a funded program, in the current economic conditions it’s not about whether it’s the “right” thing to do. The real question is why invest when you can just print a flash pass or bar code. I refer to why Mount Sinai would do it. I have heard Paul Contino before but he repeated this week. It always makes sense. To repeat again…

“Correctly identifying patients and their records is difficult just within a single hospital, but gets far worse between multiple institutions, according to a leading practitioner and specialist on the subject,” said Paul Contino, vice president, Information Technology, at Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York.

Paul cautioned that identity management must be addressed correctly up front or “we’re going to have problems with the linkages of electronic medical records” on a regional or even national basis. Mount Sinai revamped patient registration processes and implemented a smart card-based patient card to more accurately link individuals to their medical and administrative records.

In fact it’s completely irresponsible to invest in health information technology without doing it. The financial arguments are well established. Organizations implement new health IT applications can use PKI and PIV credentials. Soon the entire U.S. government will use it and a lot of people interact with it.

More information is available in Smart Card Alliance publications. “Effective Health care Identity Management: A Necessary First Step for Improving U.S. Health Care Information Systems” explains the current problems with identity management in health care and its costs. It also proposes solutions that leverage existing standards developed for other federal identity programs.

The newly published “Smart Card Technology in Health Care” frequently asked questions document outlines how the technology is used to manage patient identity and protect a health care consumer’s personal information.

Read more from D’Agostino here[end] 

The Basque National Health System has launched a neonatal security system designed to monitor and protect new-born infants using RFID technology.

When a pregnant woman is admitted to hospital, she is provided a tag with a unique identification which can be read in all the maternity zones. When the baby is born, an RFID tag specially designed for the new born is fitted to its ankle. The device monitors the infant 24 hours a day, detecting unauthorized movements, registering entries and exits to and from and enabling immediate location information.

read more »

Codebench Inc. and Hirsch Identive announced the integration of Codebench’s PIVCheck Plus software with Hirsch Identive’s Velocity Management Software, which aims to provide federal government and commercial customers with a solution for identity validation, authentication and PACS registration using mobile handheld devices.

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HP partnered with Anakam to offer a cloud-based system for identity vetting and credentials. Bryan Maybee, a solutions architect at HP, says the system can be used by the public or private sector for registering individuals to online services.

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The General Services Administration (GSA) has implemented its first cloud-based physical access system at the Neal Smith Federal Building in Des Moines, Iowa.

The GSA contracted with BridgePoint Systems to utilize its TrustAlert Physical Access Control Systems. BridgePoint partnered with EmbarkIT to install the system, which replaced the GSA’s 10-year-old legacy system. The system leverages the GSA’s Kansas City, Missouri-based WAN and remote IT infrastructure, which allows the building to shrink its carbon footprint.

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Numerous challenges to porting ID to handsets

Zack Martin, Editor, Avisian Publications

U.S. government smart card officials want some way to either use the PIV on mobile devices or have the mobile itself be used as the credential. If there was one item missing from the first draft of FIPS 201-2 it was that, officials have bemoaned.

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Florida-based Codebench has released IDSync, a software development kit that enables automated provisioning and deprovisioning of users and credentials into a supported physical access control system.

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