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Diversinet puts personal records in your Wallet

Diversinet puts personal records in your Wallet By:   On: 16 Jun 2008 For: Network World Canada Creator

The Toronto-based firm's MobiSecure application allow users to view, e-mail and fax personal records from a mobile phone. Why the health-care sector is an early adopter



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Toronto-based Diversinet Corp. has announced new versions of its MobiSecure Wallet and Vault applications for secure mobile access to medical and personal information.

The software Wallet creates a one-time password for access to the vault, with the smart phone or PDA itself serving as the second factor in a two-factor authentication system, according to Stuart Vaeth, the company’s chief security officer.

Files are stored in the server-side Vault application and can be downloaded to the wallet on the phone. “The safety deposit box is a good analogy,” Vaeth said. Not only does the Vault application validate the phone accessing the account, “the phone actually validates the server based on a shared key” known only to the server and the device. “Data at rest is always encrypted,” and data in transit is encrypted by the password, Vaeth said.

The information is stored as data cards, wrapped in an XML document to allow presentation on the phone. The information can be viewed, e-mailed or faxed to another device.

There can be multiple wallets for a single vault, and users can temporarily delegate access to the vault to another device, for example, if a user goes to a new medical clinic that’s not equipped with the software.

“If they’re not a vault user … you can do that by generating a one-time password” for access through the clinic’s PC, Vaeth said.

The MobiSecure applications are the engine that drives the Mobile Lockbox service from Intersections Inc., which provides risk and identity management services. Users can aggregate their personal records and monitor their credit and identity information. It’s a subscription-based service, a value-add to Intersections’ Identity Guard offering.

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AllOne Health Group, launched by the Hospital Service Association of Northeastern Pennsylvania, is offering AllOne Mobile, to allow users mobile access to their health records. And while Diversinet is exploring relationships with Canadian health care providers, there are fundamental differences in the systems that make the U.S. the primary market, said Jay Couse, the company’s senior vice-president of business development.

In the U.S., where there is no public health insurance program, 200 million people are insured by companies like Blue Cross. There’s competition and churn and cost pressure, according to Couse, and the insurers are looking for a stickier relationship. Providing properly formatted eligibility and payment forms speeds processes and cuts customer service costs, and pushing fitness, dietary and blood pressure tools out to clients can reduce clinic visits.

In the U.S., personal health records are the property of the individual, whereas in Canada, the records are owned by the provincial health authority. So a Diversinet offering for the Canadian market would have to be focused on the provider, rather than the patient, Couse said.


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