Enabling Privacy-Assured Fog-Based Data Aggregation in E-Healthcare Systems

IEEE Trans Industr Inform. 2020 May 19;17(3):1948-1957. doi: 10.1109/TII.2020.2995228. eCollection 2021 Mar.

Abstract

Wearable body area network is a key component of the modern-day e-healthcare system (e.g., telemedicine), particularly as the number and types of wearable medical monitoring systems increase. The importance of such systems is reinforced in the current COVID-19 pandemic. In addition to the need for a secure collection of medical data, there is also a need to process data in real-time. In this article, we design an improved symmetric homomorphic cryptosystem and a fog-based communication architecture to support delay- or time-sensitive monitoring and other-related applications. Specifically, medical data can be analyzed at the fog servers in a secure manner. This will facilitate decision making, for example, allowing relevant stakeholders to detect and respond to emergency situations, based on real-time data analysis. We present two attack games to demonstrate that our approach is secure (i.e., chosen-plaintext attack resilience under the computational Diffie-Hellman assumption), and evaluate the complexity of its computations. A comparative summary of its performance and three other related approaches suggests that our approach enables privacy-assured medical data aggregation, and the simulation experiments using Microsoft Azure further demonstrate the utility of our scheme.

Keywords: COVID-19; data aggregation; e-healthcare; fog-based healthcare; privacy-preserving; wireless body area network (WBAN).

Grants and funding

This work was supported in part by the National Science Foundation of China under Grant 61871064, Grant 61501080, Grant 61771090, and Grant 61601214, in part by the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities under No. DUT19JC08, and in part by the Guangxi Key Laboratory of Trusted Software under Grant No. kx201903. The work of K.–K. Raymond Choo was supported by the Cloud Technology Endowed Professorship.