An Empirical Study on Secure Usage of Mobile Health Apps: The Attack Simulation Approach
Bakheet Aljedaani, Aakash Ahmad, Mansooreh Zahedi, M. Ali Babar

TL;DR
This study empirically investigates mobile health app users' security awareness by simulating attack scenarios and analyzing their behaviors, revealing gaps in privacy understanding and authentication preferences.
Contribution
It introduces an action-based approach to assess user security behaviors in mHealth apps through attack simulations, complementing survey-based studies.
Findings
Majority of users have negative views on access permissions and privacy policies.
73.3% of users denied at least one permission, indicating privacy concerns.
36% of users preferred no authentication method.
Abstract
Mobile applications, mobile apps for short, have proven their usefulness in enhancing service provisioning across a multitude of domains that range from smart healthcare, to mobile commerce, and areas of context sensitive computing. In recent years, a number of empirically grounded, survey-based studies have been conducted to investigate secure development and usage of mHealth apps. However, such studies rely on self reported behaviors documented via interviews or survey questions that lack a practical, i.e. action based approach to monitor and synthesise users actions and behaviors in security critical scenarios. We conducted an empirical study, engaging participants with attack simulation scenarios and analyse their actions, for investigating the security awareness of mHealth app users via action-based research. We simulated some common security attack scenarios in mHealth context and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPrivacy, Security, and Data Protection · Mobile Health and mHealth Applications · Digital Mental Health Interventions
