Interoperability and Security in Wireless Body Area Network Infrastructures

Wireless body are networks (WBAN) and their supporting information infrastructures offer unprecedented opportunities to monitor state of health without constraining the activities of a wearer. These mobile point-of-care systems are now realizable due to the convergence of technologies such as low-power wireless communication standards, plug-and-play device buses, off-the-shelf development kits for low-power microcontrollers, handheld computers, electronic medical records, and the Internet. To increase acceptance of personal monitoring technology while lowering equipment cost, advances must be made in interoperability (at both the system and device levels) and security. This paper presents an overview of WBAN infrastructure work in these areas currently underway in the Medical Component Design Laboratory at Kansas State University (KSU) and at the University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH). KSU efforts include the development of wearable health status monitoring systems that utilize ISO/IEE 11073, Bluetooth, Health Level 7, and OpenEMed. WBAN efforts at UAH include the development of wearable activity and health monitors that incorporate ZigBee-compliant wireless sensor platforms with hardware-level encryption and the TinyOS development environment. WBAN infrastructures are complex, requiring many functional support elements. To realize these infrastructures through collaborative efforts, organizations such as KSU and UAH must define and utilize standard interfaces, nomenclature, and security approaches

[1]  Steve Warren,et al.  A wearable standards-based point-of-care system for home use , 2003, Proceedings of the 25th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (IEEE Cat. No.03CH37439).

[2]  Marion Michael Hightower,et al.  The Role of Technology in Reducing Health Care Costs - Phase II and Phase III , 2004 .

[3]  D A Perednia,et al.  The Telemedicine Information Exchange (TIE) , 1996, Journal of telemedicine and telecare.

[4]  J. Lebak,et al.  Reconfigurable Point-of-Care Systems Designed with Interoperability Standards , 2004, The 26th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society.

[5]  S. Becker THE HEALTH INSURANCE PORTABILITY AND ACCOUNTABILITY ACT , 2004 .

[6]  E Jovanov,et al.  Patient monitoring using personal area networks of wireless intelligent sensors. , 2001, Biomedical sciences instrumentation.

[7]  Aleksandar Milenkovic,et al.  Journal of Neuroengineering and Rehabilitation Open Access a Wireless Body Area Network of Intelligent Motion Sensors for Computer Assisted Physical Rehabilitation , 2005 .

[8]  Jeff Kabachinski,et al.  What is Health Level 7? , 2006, Biomedical instrumentation & technology.

[9]  Richard Layne Craft Telemedicine system interoperability architecture: concept description and architecture overview. , 2004 .