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ONE® Mail Training Presentation

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Presentation on theme: "ONE® Mail Training Presentation"— Presentation transcript:

1 ONE® Mail Training Presentation
North York General Hospital ONE® Mail Training Presentation

2 ONE Mail Training This presentation illustrates:
The differences between regular and ONE Mail. The security features of ONE Mail. How to safely send through the ONE Mail service. What’s in it for me?

3 How does basic E-mail work?
Basic - such as Hotmail, Yahoo or Sympatico accounts are unprotected accounts. Mail can be intercepted and read by others as it moves across the public Internet. Think of basic as you would a postcard – your information could be available to prying eyes. You should never send personal information in an unsecured .

4 How does basic E-mail work?
Automated slide to show how basic travels. starts with user composing a message – they click send – it goes to the organization’s mail server. The mail server check’s if it’s a local recipient – if it’s not – finds the recipient server on the internet and sends the over the internet to the recipient server. That user received the message to their mail client at their desktop. Various vulnerabilities over the internet.

5 How does ONE Mail work? ONE Mail provides additional layers of security designed to allow healthcare providers to securely and reliably send health and patient information. ONE Mail satisfies government regulations regarding the protection of information privacy and confidentiality that apply to personal health information. Users access ONE Mail using secure connection protocols over a managed private network. When followed, policies and procedures ensure privacy, security, and acceptable use. Security layer examples in ONE Mail: Firewalls Virus detection software Anti-Spam software ONE Network (SSHAs managed private network) Transport Layer Security (TLS) Intrusion detection systems

6 How does ONE Mail work? Introduce the ONE Network (MPN) all participating organizations must be on the MPN, prerequisite to ONE Mail deployment. All among participating organizations travels the MPN and not the internet – can still send to internet recipients, just not considered secure because it has left the ONE Mail environment. ONE Mail flows through the routing service. The red connection lines illustrate secure tunnels – the previous slide mentions secure connection protocols over a managed private network – the red lines are the secure/encrypted connections. Scenario 1 – mail from OACCAC to UHN – travels ONE Network (the MPN) to central routing that directs it to UHN Scenario 2 – mail from UHN to internet – travels ONE Network to central routing and out to the internet (not secure) Scenario 3 – mail from internet – travels in from the internet to central routing to OACCAC (not secure) Scenarios 2&3 are not considered secure because either the sender or the recipient are not participants in ONE Mail – Mail will still flow to non-participants – it just isn’t considered secure through ONE Mail

7 ONE Mail also includes ONE Pages
ONE Pages is a searchable directory of all ONE Mail subscribers to whom you can securely send through ONE Mail. Depending on your organization’s configuration of ONE Mail and acceptable security practices, ONE Pages can be accessed: Through your web browser at (if you have an eHealth Ontario ONE Network Circuit) Through your ONE Pages address book in your desktop client Contact information in ONE Pages includes the first and last name of the ONE Mail subscriber, organization to which they belong, and their ONE Mail address. Remember that ONE Mail is secure among participating organizations. ONE Pages is the authoritative list of subscribers within participating organizations. sent to anyone not listed in ONE Pages is not considered secure – both sender and recipient need to be from participating organizations. ONE Pages is updated twice daily, systematically from participating orgs, to ensure it’s current. To ensure that the message sent is secure, simply send it to a recipient found in ONE Pages. In other words:  Addresses that are listed in ONE Pages are secure.  Addresses that are not listed in ONE Pages are not secure. This does not prevent you from sending to recipients that are not ONE Mail subscribers. Do not send personal health information to a recipient who is not listed in ONE Pages because they are not part of the ONE Mail service. If the recipient has multiple addresses, you must be sure that you are using the address that is listed in ONE Page. Why not to send an with sensitive information to a recipient not listed in ONE Pages? Because messages sent to recipients not listed in ONE Pages will not be: Sent securely End users will receive a user guide and a multi-media package on both of these demo’s to use at their convenience as a refresher and instructions.

8 ONE Pages through Outlook
Create new Click the address book

9 Click the drop down list and select ONE Pages This Address list holds a complete listing of secure addresses that are part of the provincial ONE Mail network.

10 Select from the contact list, click file and create new message

11 To search for email addresses by company , click on Advanced Find

12 Type the Company Name, click ok
Please note, some organizations may choose not to publish all internal addresses in ONE pages

13 ONE Pages through Web Mail
You can also access ONE Pages through outlook web access Go to Type your username and password

14 Click on the address book icon to open the address list window.
Click on “Show other address list”

15 Select ONE Pages

16 Select and right click from the contact list to create new message
You can also search by name. Note: Search by company is not available in webmail

17 How will ONE Mail help me?
Share personal health information with other ONE Mail users, knowing the information is fully protected. Access management Faster transport Cost effective It gives you the confidence that the person to whom you send a message is actually the person listed – and nobody else. It lets you send personal health information electronically, allowing faster access to information to make clinical decisions. Reduced costs of alternative forms of communication such as faxing and couriering.

18 Collaborate securely anywhere and anytime
ONE Mail is a communication tool providing the ability to transfer patient information to other healthcare partners (providing they are also participating in ONE Mail) in cases where faxes or couriers had previously been used. Now is a perfect time to think through current information flow processes for ways to become more efficient and secure through the use of ONE Mail.

19 Security Tip Copies of e-mails or attachments saved on your computer
are outside of the ONE Mail system. Therefore: It is your responsibility to protect saved copies with sensitive content as you would protect paper records. Follow all privacy and security guidelines and legislation when sending personal health information by , just as you would when faxing or couriering paper documents.

20 Summary of ONE Mail ONE Mail provides secure to you and other participating partners. You must ensure that the recipient’s address is listed in the ONE Pages (Global Address Book) when sending sensitive information. You are responsible for the security/ privacy of personal health information. Any messages/attachments saved on your computer are your responsibility. Treat electronic records as you would paper records.

21 For Blackberry users: s sent to you from a secure source (ONE mail) can be securely opened and viewed using your device. You can send secure s from your device to ONE mail accounts. You can add ONE mail accounts to your device directory in the same way you would add any address. However, you are not able to search the ONE pages address list as this functionality is not supported by the device

22 Who do I contact for support or information?
Phone: :(416) Ext. 6074


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