Cyber-Analytics: Identifying Discriminants of Data Breaches.

Q3 Medicine
Diane Dolezel, Alexander McLeod
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In this study, the relationship between data breach characteristics and the number of individuals affected by these violations was considered. Data were acquired from the Department of Health and Human Services breach reporting database and analyzed using SPSS. Regression analyses revealed that the hacking/IT incident breach type and network server breach location were the most significant predictors of the number of individuals affected; however, they were not predictive when combined. Moreover, network server location and unauthorized access/disclosure breach type were predictive when combined. Additional analyses of variance revealed that covered entity type and business associate presence were significant predictors, while the geographic region of a breach occurrence was insignificant. The results of this study revealed several associations between healthcare breach characteristics and the number of individuals affected, suggesting that more individuals are affected in hacking/IT incidents and network server breaches independently and that network server breach location and unauthorized access/disclosure breach type were predictive in combination.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

网络分析:识别数据泄露的歧视因素。
在这项研究中,考虑了数据泄露特征与受这些违规行为影响的个人数量之间的关系。数据来自卫生与公众服务部违规报告数据库,并使用SPSS进行分析。回归分析显示,黑客入侵/IT事件的入侵类型和网络服务器的入侵位置是受影响人数的最重要预测因素;然而,它们结合在一起并不能预测。此外,网络服务器位置和未经授权的访问/披露违规类型在组合时是可预测的。额外的方差分析显示,被覆盖的实体类型和业务伙伴的存在是重要的预测因素,而违约发生的地理区域并不重要。这项研究的结果揭示了医疗保健漏洞特征与受影响的个人数量之间的几个关联,表明更多的个人独立地受到黑客攻击/IT事件和网络服务器漏洞的影响,网络服务器漏洞位置和未经授权的访问/披露漏洞类型是可预测的。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: Perspectives in Health Information Management is a scholarly, peer-reviewed research journal whose mission is to advance health information management practice and to encourage interdisciplinary collaboration between HIM professionals and others in disciplines supporting the advancement of the management of health information. The primary focus is to promote the linkage of practice, education, and research and to provide contributions to the understanding or improvement of health information management processes and outcomes.
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