Litcius/Paper detail

Cybersecurity in Health Care

Karsten Weber, Nadine Kleine

2020˜The œInternational library of ethics, law and technology16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Ethical questions have always been crucial in health care; the rapid dissemination of ICT makes some of those questions even more pressing and also raises new ones. One of these new questions is cybersecurity in relation to ethics in health care. In order to more closely examine this issue, this chapter introduces Beauchamp and Childress’ four principles of biomedical ethics as well as additional ethical values and technical aims of relevance for health care. Based on this, two case studies—implantable medical devices and electronic Health Card—are presented, which illustrate potential conflicts between ethical values and technical aims as well as between ethical values themselves. It becomes apparent that these conflicts cannot be eliminated in general but must be reconsidered on a case-by-case basis. An ethical debate on cybersecurity regarding the design and implementation of new (digital) technologies in health care is essential.

Topics & Concepts

Relevance (law)Engineering ethicsHealth careOrder (exchange)Relation (database)Ethical issuesPolitical scienceDigital healthPublic relationsComputer securityComputer scienceEngineeringBusinessLawDatabaseFinanceNeuroethics, Human Enhancement, Biomedical InnovationsBiomedical Ethics and RegulationEthics in Clinical Research