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dp3t-documents/meta-arch/backoffice-process.md

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Backoffice process for disclosure of contacts

Assumptions

  • Done by a medical professional in the context of a normal consult.

  • Thus allowing for a professional assessment

  • Thus allowing for accurate and appropriate advice, followups and so on -- meeting general accepted standards of medical care.

  • Thus ensuring that the right (medical) information is captures in the right (separate) systems.

  • Thus ensuring that the patient is able to provide an informed consent. With information professionally presented by a licensed medical professional at the appropriate levels and in the context of a treatment, patient/doctor relation.

Process

  • At some point, after explaining the ramifications the patient provides his or her informed consent to share the opaque infection information

  • The medical professional may, or may not, log this as is required by their professional standards.

  • The patient accesses a special section in the App and shows or conveys (e.g. over the phone) a sequence of (cryptographically random) 6 + 4 numbers or a sequence of words (aka as trustwords or ``car battery horse staple') in an appropriate language.

  • The app posts a 32 byte hash of the opaque data that it intends to submit to a backend service with the first 6 digits as a reference.

  • The health professional enters the the 6 + 4 digits into a backoffice systems; the system locates the hash an the professional then his or her UZI chipcard to digitally sign the hash+6+4 digits and posts the resulting S/MIME package back to the backend.

  • The phone of the user picks this the signed package up; validates the signature of the professional using a build in root certifcate, paying attention to the 'flags' in the professional certficate (e.g. Zorgverlener waarvan het beroep valt onder artikel 3 van de Wet BIG) and if correct - posts the relevant opaque seeds to the backend along with the S/MIME package that contains the signed hash/10 digits. It then destroys any seeds and rekeys (as per the protocol).

  • The backend receives this data, verifies the S/MIME signature, verifies that the hash contained in it matches that of the submitted seed and queues the seeds up to the next aggregation cycle.

Special case for a patient that excercises his right to not know the results of the test.

In (most?) countries a patient has a right to not be informed of a test result in certain contexts.

  • In this case - the patient generates the hash / 6 + 4 digits -prior- to consultation; and shares the 10 digits with the medical professional.

  • Once the patient has left the room - the professinal may or may not use these to initiate the process

In this case - the user inteface of the appMUST be careful to not disclose this sharing.