1、February 2015Translation by DIN-Sprachendienst.English price group 15No part of this translation may be reproduced without prior permission ofDIN Deutsches Institut fr Normung e. V., Berlin. Beuth Verlag GmbH, 10772 Berlin, Germany,has the exclusive right of sale for German Standards (DIN-Normen).IC
2、S 35.240.80!%?c=“2286426www.din.deDDIN EN ISO 22600-2Health informatics Privilege management and access control Part 2: Formal models (ISO 22600-2:2014);English version EN ISO 22600-2:2014,English translation of DIN EN ISO 22600-2:2015-02Medizinische Informatik Privilegienmanagement und Zugriffssteu
3、erung Teil 2: Formale Modelle (ISO 22600-2:2014);Englische Fassung EN ISO 22600-2:2014,Englische bersetzung von DIN EN ISO 22600-2:2015-02Informatique de sant Gestion de privilges et contrle daccs Partie 2: Modles formels (ISO 22600-2:2014);Version anglaise EN ISO 22600-2:2014,Traduction anglaise de
4、 DIN EN ISO 22600-2:2015-02www.beuth.deIn case of doubt, the German-language original shall be considered authoritative.Document comprises 33 pages01.15 DIN EN ISO 22600-2:2015-02 2 A comma is used as the decimal marker. National foreword This document (EN ISO 22600-2:2014) has been prepared by Tech
5、nical Committee ISO/TC 215 “Health informatics” in collaboration with Technical Committee CEN/TC 251 “Health informatics” (Secretariat: NEN, Netherlands). The responsible German body involved in its preparation was the DIN-Normenausschuss Medizin (DIN Standards Committee Medicine), Working Committee
6、 NA 063-07-04 AA Sicherheit. The text of ISO 22600-2 has been adopted without any modification. In translating the text into German particular attention was paid to the use of a correct and consistent technical terminology in German. The full English term is given for each term in Clause 3 “Terms an
7、d definitions”. English text in figures 4, 5, 6, 9, 10, A.3, A.4, A.5 and in Tables 1, 2 and A.1 has been taken over because a translation into German was considered to be unnecessary and the target group of IT specialists normally has sufficient knowledge of English to understand these texts. The D
8、IN Standard corresponding to the International Standard referred to in this document is as follows: ISO/IEC 27002 DIN ISO/IEC 27002 DIN EN ISO 22600 consists of the following parts, under the general title Health informatics Privilege management and access control: Part 1: Overview and policy manage
9、ment Part 2: Formal models Part 3: Implementations National Annex NA (informative) Bibliography DIN ISO/IEC 27002, Information technology Security techniques Code of practice for information secu-rity management (currently at draft stage) EN ISO 22600-2 October 2014 ICS 35.240.80 English Version Hea
10、lth informatics - Privilege management and access control - Part 2: Formal models (ISO 22600-2:2014) Informatique de sant - Gestion de privilges et contrle daccs - Partie 2: Modles formels (ISO 22600-2:2014) Medizinische Informatik - Privilegienmanagement undZugriffssteuerung - Teil 2: Formale Model
11、le(ISO 22600-2:2014)This European Standard was approved by CEN on 22 May 2014. CEN members are bound to comply with the CEN/CENELEC Internal Regulations which stipulate the conditions for giving this European Standard the status of a national standard without any alteration. Up-to-date lists and bib
12、liographical references concerning such national standards may be obtained on application to the CEN-CENELEC Management Centre or to any CEN member. This European Standard exists in three official versions (English, French, German). A version in any other language made by translation under the respo
13、nsibility of a CEN member into its own language and notified to the CEN-CENELEC Management Centre has the same status as the official versions. CEN members are the national standards bodies of Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Former Yugoslav Rep
14、ublic of Macedonia, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey andUnited Kingdom. CEN-CENELEC Management Centre: Avenue Marnix 17, B-1000 Bruss
15、els 2014 CEN All rights of exploitation in any form and by any means reserved worldwide for CEN national Members. Ref. No. EN ISO 22600-2:2014 EEUROPEAN COMMITTEE FOR STANDARDIZATIONCOMIT EUROPEN DE NORMALISATIONEUROPISCHES KOMITEE FR NORMUNGEUROPEAN STANDARDNORME EUROPENNEEUROPISCHE NORMContents Pa
16、ge Foreword . 3 Introduction . 4 1 Scope . 6 2 Normative references. 6 3 Terms and definitions 6 4 Abbreviated terms 11 5 Component paradigm 11 6 Generic models 12 6.1 Framework 12 6.2 Domain model . 14 6.3 Document model 15 6.4 Policy model . 16 6.5 Role model 19 6.6 Authorization model Role and pr
17、ivilege assignment . 19 6.7 Control model . 20 6.8 Delegation model . 21 6.9 Access control model 23 Annex A (informative) Functional and structural roles 25 Bibliography 30 2DIN EN ISO 22600-2:2015-02 EN ISO 22600-2:2014 (E) ForewordThis document (EN ISO 22600-2:2014) has been prepared by Technical
18、 Committee ISO/TC 215 Health informatics in collaboration with Technical Committee CEN/TC 251 “Health informatics” the secretariat of which is held by NEN. This European Standard shall be given the status of a national standard, either by publication of an identical text or by endorsement, at the la
19、test by April 2015, and conflicting national standards shall be withdrawn at the latest by April 2015. Attention is drawn to the possibility that some of the elements of this document may be the subject of patent rights. CEN and/or CENELEC shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all suc
20、h patent rights. According to the CEN-CENELEC Internal Regulations, the national standards organizations of the following countries are bound to implement this European Standard: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Former Yugoslav Republic of Maced
21、onia, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey and the United Kingdom. Endorsement notice The text of ISO 22600-2:2014 has been approved by C
22、EN as EN ISO 22600-2:2014 without any modification. “”3DIN EN ISO 22600-2:2015-02EN ISO 22600-2:2014 (E)IntroductionThe distributed architecture of shared care information systems supporting service-oriented architecture (SOA) is increasingly based on corporate networks and virtual private networks.
23、 For meeting the interoperability challenge, the use of standardized user interfaces, tools, and protocols, which ensures platform independence, but also the number of really open information systems, is rapidly growing during the last couple of years.As a common situation today, hospitals are suppo
24、rted by several vendors providing different applications, which are not able to communicate authentication and authorization since each has its own way of handling these functions. For achieving an integrated scenario, it takes a remarkable amount of money, time, and efforts to get users and changin
25、g organizational environments dynamically mapped before starting communication and cooperation. Resources required for the development and maintenance of security functions grow exponentially with the number of applications, with the complexity of organizations towards a regional, national, or even
26、international level, and with the flexibility of users playing multiple roles, sometimes even simultaneously.The situation becomes even more challenging when inter-organizational communications happens, thereby crossing security policy domain boundaries. Moving from one healthcare centre to another
27、or from country to country, different rules for privileges and their management can apply to similar types of users, both for execution of particular functions and for access to information. The policy differences between these domains have to be bridged automatically or through policy agreements, d
28、efining sets of rules followed by the parties involved, for achieving interoperability.Another challenge to be met is how to improve the quality of care by using IT without infringing the privacy of the patient. To provide physicians with adequate information about the patient, a virtual electronic
29、health care record is required which makes it possible to keep track of all the activities belonging to one patient regardless of where and by whom they have been performed and documented. In such an environment, a generic model or specific agreement between the parties for managing privileges and a
30、ccess control including the patient or its representative is needed.Besides a diversity of roles and responsibilities, typical for any type of large organization, also ethical and legal aspects in the healthcare scenario due to the sensitivity of person-related health information managed and its per
31、sonal and social impact have to be considered.Advanced solutions for privilege management and access control are required today already, but this challenge will even grow over the next couple of years. The reason is the increase of information exchanged between systems in order to fulfil the demands
32、 of health service providers at different care levels for having access to more and more patient-related information to ensure the quality and efficiency of patients diagnosis and treatment, however combined with increased security and privacy risks.The implementation of this International Standard
33、might be currently too advanced and therefore not feasible in certain organizational and technical settings. For meeting the basic principle of best possible action, it is therefore very important that at least a policy agreement is written between the parties stating to progress towards this Intern
34、ational Standard when any update/upgrade of the systems is intended. The level of formalization and granularity of policies and the objects these policies are bound to defines the solution maturity on a pathway towards the presented specification.The policy agreement also has to contain defined diff
35、erences in the security systems and agreed solutions on how to overcome the differences. For example, the authentication service and privileges of a requesting party at the responding site have to be managed according to the policy declared in the agreement. For that reason, information and service
36、requester, as well as information and service provider on the one hand, and information and services requested and provided on the other hand, have to be grouped and classified in a limited number of concepts for enabling the specification of a limited number of solution categories. Based on that cl
37、assification, claimant mechanisms, target sensitivity mechanisms, and policy specification and management mechanisms can be implemented. Once all parties have signed the policy agreement, the communication and information exchange can start with the existing systems if the parties can accept the ris
38、ks. If there are unacceptable risks which have to be eliminated before the information exchange starts, they shall also be recorded in the policy agreement 4DIN EN ISO 22600-2:2015-02 EN ISO 22600-2:2014 (E) together with an action plan stating how these risks shall be removed. The policy agreement
39、also has to contain a time plan for this work and an agreement on how it shall be financed.The documentation of the negotiation process is very important and provides the platform for the policy agreement.Privilege management and access control address security and privacy services required for comm
40、unication and cooperation, i.e. distributed use of health information. It also implies safety aspects, professional standards, and legal and ethical issues. This International Standard introduces principles and specifies services needed for managing privileges and access control. Cryptographic proto
41、cols are out of the scope of this International Standard.This three-part International Standard references existing architectural and security standards as well as specifications in the healthcare area such as ISO, CEN, ASTM, OMG, W3C, etc., and endorses existing appropriate standards or identifies
42、enhancements or modifications or the need for new standards. It comprises of: ISO 22600-1: describes the scenarios and the critical parameters in information exchange across policy domains. It also gives examples of necessary documentation methods as the basis for the policy agreement. ISO 22600-2:
43、describes and explains, in a more detailed manner, the architectures and underlying models for privilege management and access control which are necessary for secure information sharing including the formal representation of policies. ISO 22600-3: describes examples of implementable specifications o
44、f application security services and infrastructural services using different specification languages.It accommodates policy bridging. It is based on a conceptual model where local authorization servers and cross border directory and policy repository services can assist access control in various app
45、lications (software components). The policy repository provides information on rules for access to various application functions based on roles and other attributes. The directory service enables identification of the individual user. The granted access will be based on four aspects: the authenticat
46、ed identification of principals (i.e. human users and objects that need to operate under their own rights) involved; the rules for access to a specific information object including purpose of use; the rules regarding authorization attributes linked to the principal provided by the authorization mana
47、ger; the functions of the specific applicationThis International Standard supports collaboration between several authorization managers that can operate over organizational and policy borders.This International Standard is strongly related to other ISO/TC 215 work such as ISO 17090 (all parts), ISO
48、22857, ISO 21091, and ISO 21298.This International Standard is meant to be read in conjunction with its complete set of associated standards.5DIN EN ISO 22600-2:2015-02EN ISO 22600-2:2014 (E)1 ScopeThis multi-part International Standard defines principles and specifies services needed for managing p
49、rivileges and access control to data and/or functions.It focuses on communication and use of health information distributed across policy domain boundaries. This includes healthcare information sharing across unaffiliated providers of healthcare, healthcare organizations, health insurance companies, their patients, staff members, and trading partners by both individuals and application systems ranging from a local situation to a regional or even national situatio