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      Enforcing Human Subject Regulations using Blockchain and Smart Contracts

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          Abstract

          Recent changes to the Common Rule, which govern Institutional Review Boards (IRB), require implementing new policies to strengthen research protocols involving human subjects. A major challenge in implementing such policies is an inability to automatically and consistently meet these ethical rules while securing sensitive information collected during the study. In this paper, we propose a novel framework, based on blockchain technology, to enforce IRB regulations on data collection. We demonstrate how to design smart contracts and a ledger to meet the requirements of an IRB protocol, including subject recruitment, informed consent management, secondary data sharing, monitoring risks, and generating automated assessments for continuous review. Furthermore, we show how we can employ the immutable transaction log in the blockchain to embed security in research activities by detecting malicious activities and robustly tracking subject involvement. We evaluate our approach by assessing its ability to enforce IRB guidelines in different types of human subjects studies, including a genomic study, a drug trial, and a wearable sensor monitoring study.

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          Most cited references18

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          Healthcare Data Gateways: Found Healthcare Intelligence on Blockchain with Novel Privacy Risk Control.

          Healthcare data are a valuable source of healthcare intelligence. Sharing of healthcare data is one essential step to make healthcare system smarter and improve the quality of healthcare service. Healthcare data, one personal asset of patient, should be owned and controlled by patient, instead of being scattered in different healthcare systems, which prevents data sharing and puts patient privacy at risks. Blockchain is demonstrated in the financial field that trusted, auditable computing is possible using a decentralized network of peers accompanied by a public ledger. In this paper, we proposed an App (called Healthcare Data Gateway (HGD)) architecture based on blockchain to enable patient to own, control and share their own data easily and securely without violating privacy, which provides a new potential way to improve the intelligence of healthcare systems while keeping patient data private. Our proposed purpose-centric access model ensures patient own and control their healthcare data; simple unified Indicator-Centric Schema (ICS) makes it possible to organize all kinds of personal healthcare data practically and easily. We also point out that MPC (Secure Multi-Party Computing) is one promising solution to enable untrusted third-party to conduct computation over patient data without violating privacy.
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            MedRec: Using Blockchain for Medical Data Access and Permission Management

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              Blockchain technology in healthcare: The revolution starts here

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                BHTY
                Blockchain in Healthcare Today
                Partners in Digital Health
                2573-8240
                11 April 2018
                2018
                : 1
                : 10.30953/bhty.v1.10
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Olivia Choudhury, MS, PhD, postdoctoral researcher, IBM Research, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
                [2 ]Hillol Sarker, MS, PhD, postdoctoral researcher at IBM Research, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
                [3 ]Nolan Rudolph, BS, research engineer, IBM Research, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
                [4 ]Morgan Foreman, BSPsy, healthcare data scientist, IBM Research, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
                [5 ]Nicholas Fay, MCS, healthcare data scientist, IBM Research, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
                [6 ]Murtaza Dhuliawala, MCS, research engineer, IBM Research, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
                [7 ]Issa Sylla, BA, research engineer, IBM Research, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
                [8 ]Noor Fairoza, MS, Dev Ops Engineer, IBM Research, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
                [9 ]Amar Das, MD, PhD, Director of Learning Health Systems, IBM Research, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
                Author notes
                Corresponding Author: Olivia Choudhury, PhD, Olivia.Choudhury1@ 123456ibm.com
                Article
                10
                10.30953/bhty.v1.10
                088e3be3-e2b2-4a9f-9e32-59584bbe7167
                © 2018 Olivia Choudhury

                This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, adapt, enhance this work noncommercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited as first published in Blockchain in Healthcare Today™, and the use is non-commercial.

                History
                Categories
                Use Cases/Pilots/Methodologies

                Databases,Theoretical computer science,Applied computer science,Computer science,Security & Cryptology,Information systems & theory
                Data Security and Privacy,Human Subject Regulations,Smart Contracts,Healthcare and Medical Research,Blockchain,Protection of Human Subjects,Clinical Trial,“Common Rule”,Hyperledger Fabric,Distributed Ledger

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