Low-Resource Speech Recognition of 500-Word Vocabularies
Sabine Deligne, Ellen Eide, et al.
INTERSPEECH - Eurospeech 2001
A fundamental requirement for the healthcare industry is that the delivery of care comes first and nothing should interfere with it. As a consequence, the access control mechanisms used in healthcare to regulate and restrict the disclosure of data are often bypassed in case of emergencies. This phenomenon, called "break the glass", is a common pattern in healthcare organizations and, though quite useful and mandatory in emergency situations, from a security perspective, it represents a serious system weakness. Malicious users, in fact, can abuse the system by exploiting the break the glass principle to gain unauthorized privileges and accesses. In this paper, we propose an access control solution aimed at better regulating break the glass exceptions that occur in healthcare systems. Our solution is based on the definition of different policy spaces, a language, and a composition algebra to regulate access to patient data and to balance the rigorous nature of traditional access control systems with the "delivery of care comes first" principle. © 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Sabine Deligne, Ellen Eide, et al.
INTERSPEECH - Eurospeech 2001
Rolf Clauberg
IBM J. Res. Dev
Marshall W. Bern, Howard J. Karloff, et al.
Theoretical Computer Science
Alfonso P. Cardenas, Larry F. Bowman, et al.
ACM Annual Conference 1975