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ECG STEGANOGRAPHY FOR PROTECTING PATIENT CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION

Nikita Ashish Soni and Vilas Namdeo Nitnaware
Department of ETC, DY Patil School of Engineering, Ambi

Abstract— With the growing number of aging population and a significant portion of that suffering from cardiac diseases, it is conceivable that remote ECG patient monitoring systems are expected to be widely used as Point-of-Care applications in hospitals around the world. Therefore, huge amount of ECG signal collected by Body Sensor Networks (BSNs) from remote patients at homes will be transmitted along with other physiological readings such as blood pressure, temperature, glucose level etc. and diagnosed by those remote patient monitoring systems. It is utterly important that patient confidentiality is protected while data is being transmitted over the public network as well as when they are stored in hospital servers used by remote monitoring systems. The proposed method allows ECG signal to hide its corresponding patient confidential data and other physiological information thus guaranteeing the integration between ECG and the rest. To evaluate the effectiveness of the proposed technique on the ECG signal, two distortion measurement metrics have been used: the Percentage Residual Difference (PRD) and the Wavelet Weighted PRD. It is found that the proposed technique provides high security protection for patients data with low (less than 1%) distortion and ECG data remains diagnosable after watermarking (i.e., hiding patient confidential data) and as well as after watermarks (i.e., hidden data) are removed from the watermarked data.

Index Terms— ECG, Body sensor network, Confidential information

Cite: Nikita Ashish Soni and Vilas Namdeo Nitnaware, "ECG STEGANOGRAPHY FOR PROTECTING PATIENT CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION," International Journal of Electrical and Electronic Engineering & Telecommunications, Vol. 4, No. 3, pp. 27-30, July 2015.