| Literature DB >> 34123697 |
Petar Radanliev1, David De Roure1, Uchenna Ani2, Graca Carvalho3.
Abstract
This article addresses the topic of shared responsibilities in supply chains, with a specific focus on the application of the Internet of Things (IoT) in e-health environments, and Industry 4.0 issues-concerning data security, privacy, reliability and management, data mining and knowledge exchange as well as health prevention. In this article, we critically review methodologies and guidelines that have been proposed to approach these ethical aspects in digital supply chain settings. The emerging framework presents new findings on how digital technologies affect vaccine shared supply chain systems. Through epistemological analysis, the article derives new insights for transparency and accountability of supply chain cyber risk from Internet of Things systems. This research devises a framework for ethical awareness, assessment, transparency and accountability of the emerging cyber risk from integrating IoT technologies on shared Covid-19 healthcare supply chain infrastructure.Entities:
Keywords: Covid-19 and healthcare systems; Ethical supply chain design; Ethical supply chain infrastructure; Ethics of shared risk; Internet-of-things and cyber risk; Vaccine supply chains
Year: 2021 PMID: 34123697 PMCID: PMC8180363 DOI: 10.1007/s12553-021-00565-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Technol (Berl) ISSN: 2190-7196
Fig. 1The emerging themes of the epistemological framework for awareness, transparency, accountability and ethical assessment of shared risks in supply chains, originate from analysis and adaptation of existing literature—based on [56]
Fig. 2Epistemological framework—integration design that incorporates ethical assessment of shared cyber risks