CEN EN ISO 27799 Health informatics - Information security management in health using ISO/IEC 27002
Данный раздел/документ содержится в продуктах:
- Техэксперт: Машиностроительный комплекс
- Картотека зарубежных и международных стандартов
- ISO ISO/IEC 27002 Information technology — Security techniques — Code of practice for information security management - Second Edition
- 35
- ISO ISO/IEC 27002 Information technology — Security techniques — Code of practice for information security management - Second Edition
- 35.040
- CEN ISO/TR 9241-100 Ergonomics of human-system interaction - Part 100: Introduction to standards related to software ergonomics
- ISO ISO/IEC 15504-2 CORR 1 Software engineering - Process assessment - Part 2: Performing an assessment TECHNICAL CORRIGENDUM 1 - First Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC 33001 Information technology - Process assessment - Concepts and terminology - Second Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC/IEEE 24765 Systems and software engineering - Vocabulary - First Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC 17789 Information technology - Cloud computing - Reference architecture - First Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC/IEEE 24765 Systems and software engineering - Vocabulary - First Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC 33001 Information technology - Process assessment - Concepts and terminology - Second Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC 15504-2 CORR 1 Software engineering - Process assessment - Part 2: Performing an assessment TECHNICAL CORRIGENDUM 1 - First Edition
- 13
- CEN ISO/TR 9241-100 Ergonomics of human-system interaction - Part 100: Introduction to standards related to software ergonomics
- ISO ISO/IEC 15504-2 CORR 1 Software engineering - Process assessment - Part 2: Performing an assessment TECHNICAL CORRIGENDUM 1 - First Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC 33001 Information technology - Process assessment - Concepts and terminology - Second Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC/IEEE 24765 Systems and software engineering - Vocabulary - First Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC 17789 Information technology - Cloud computing - Reference architecture - First Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC/IEEE 24765 Systems and software engineering - Vocabulary - First Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC 33001 Information technology - Process assessment - Concepts and terminology - Second Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC 15504-2 CORR 1 Software engineering - Process assessment - Part 2: Performing an assessment TECHNICAL CORRIGENDUM 1 - First Edition
- CEN ISO/TR 9241-100 Ergonomics of human-system interaction - Part 100: Introduction to standards related to software ergonomics
- ISO ISO/IEC 15504-2 CORR 1 Software engineering - Process assessment - Part 2: Performing an assessment TECHNICAL CORRIGENDUM 1 - First Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC 33001 Information technology - Process assessment - Concepts and terminology - Second Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC/IEEE 24765 Systems and software engineering - Vocabulary - First Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC 17789 Information technology - Cloud computing - Reference architecture - First Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC/IEEE 24765 Systems and software engineering - Vocabulary - First Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC 33001 Information technology - Process assessment - Concepts and terminology - Second Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC 33001 Information technology - Process assessment - Concepts and terminology - Second Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC/IEEE 24765 Systems and software engineering - Vocabulary - First Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC 17789 Information technology - Cloud computing - Reference architecture - First Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC/IEEE 24765 Systems and software engineering - Vocabulary - First Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC/IEEE 24765 Systems and software engineering - Vocabulary - First Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC 17789 Information technology - Cloud computing - Reference architecture - First Edition
- ISO ISO/IEC 17789 Information technology - Cloud computing - Reference architecture - First Edition
- BSI BS ISO/IEC 27018 Information technology — Security techniques — Code of practice for protection of personally identifiable information (PII) in public clouds acting as PII processors
- ISO ISO/IEC 27040 Information technology - Security techniques - Storage security - First Edition
- BSI BS ISO/IEC 27043 Information technology — Security techniques — Incident investigation principles and processes
- ISO ISO/IEC 27035 Information technology - Security techniques - Information security incident management - First Edition
- Картотека зарубежных и международных стандартов
European Committee for Standardization
Health informatics - Information security management in health using ISO/IEC 27002
N EN ISO 27799
Annotation
This International Standard gives guidelines for organizational information security standards and information security management practices including the selection, implementation and management of controls taking into consideration the organization’s information security risk environment(s).
This International Standard defines guidelines to support the interpretation and implementation in health informatics of ISO/IEC 27002 and is a companion to that International Standard.4)
This International Standard provides implementation guidance for the controls described in ISO/IEC 27002 and supplements them where necessary, so that they can be effectively used for managing health information security. By implementing this International Standard, healthcare organizations and other custodians of health information will be able to ensure a minimum requisite level of security that is appropriate to their organization’s circumstances and that will maintain the confidentiality, integrity and availability of personal health information in their care.
This International Standard applies to health information in all its aspects, whatever form the information takes (words and numbers, sound recordings, drawings, video, and medical images), whatever means are used to store it (printing or writing on paper or storage electronically), and whatever means are used to transmit it (by hand, through fax, over computer networks, or by post), as the information is always be appropriately protected.
This International Standard and ISO/IEC 27002 taken together define what is required in terms of information security in healthcare, they do not define how these requirements are to be met. That is to say, to the fullest extent possible, this International Standard is technology-neutral. Neutrality with respect to implementing technologies is an important feature. Security technology is still undergoing rapid development and the pace of that change is now measured in months rather than years. By contrast, while subject to periodic review, International Standards are expected on the whole to remain valid for years. Just as importantly, technological neutrality leaves vendors and service providers free to suggest new or developing technologies that meet the necessary requirements that this International Standard describes.



