DocumentCode
41156
Title
Trustworthiness of Medical Devices and Body Area Networks
Author
Meng Zhang ; Raghunathan, Anand ; Jha, Niraj K.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Princeton Univ., Princeton, NJ, USA
Volume
102
Issue
8
fYear
2014
fDate
Aug. 2014
Firstpage
1174
Lastpage
1188
Abstract
Implantable and wearable medical devices (IWMDs) are commonly used for diagnosing, monitoring, and treating various medical conditions. A general trend in these medical devices is toward increased functional complexity, software programmability, and connectivity to body area networks (BANs). However, as IWMDs become more “intelligent,” they also become less trustworthy-less reliable and more prone to attacks. Various shortcomings-hardware failures, software errors, wireless attacks, malware and software exploits, and side-channel attacks-could undermine the trustworthiness of IWMDs and BANs. While these concerns have been recognized for some time, recent demonstrations of security attacks on commercial products, e.g., pacemakers and insulin pumps, have elevated medical device security from the realm of theoretical possibility to an immediate concern. The trustworthiness of IWMDs must be addressed aggressively and proactively due to the potential for catastrophic consequences. Conventional fault tolerance and information security solutions, e.g., redundancy and cryptography, that have been employed in general-purpose and embedded computing systems cannot be applied to many IWMDs due to their extreme size and power constraints and unique usage models. While several recent efforts address defense of IWMDs against specific security attacks, a holistic strategy that considers all concerns and types of threats is required. This paper discusses trustworthiness concerns in IWMDs and BANs through a comprehensive identification and analysis of potential threats and, for each threat, provides a discussion of the merits and inadequacies of current solutions.
Keywords
biomedical telemetry; body area networks; health care; telecommunication security; BAN; IWMD; body area networks; fault tolerance; functional complexity; hardware failures; implantable and wearable medical devices; information security solutions; malware; medical device security; security attacks; side-channel attacks; software errors; software exploits; software programmability; trustworthiness; wireless attacks; Biomedical monitoring; Body area networks; Integrated circuit modeling; Medical diagnostic imaging; Medical services; Security; Software engineering; Body area networks (BANs); medical devices; personal healthcare systems; privacy; reliability; security;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Proceedings of the IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9219
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JPROC.2014.2322103
Filename
6827202
Link To Document