128 research outputs found

    Locomotion Traces Data Mining for Supporting Frail People with Cognitive Impairment

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    The rapid increase in the senior population is posing serious challenges to national healthcare systems. Hence, innovative tools are needed to early detect health issues, including cognitive decline. Several clinical studies show that it is possible to identify cognitive impairment based on the locomotion patterns of older people. Thus, this thesis at first focused on providing a systematic literature review of locomotion data mining systems for supporting Neuro-Degenerative Diseases (NDD) diagnosis, identifying locomotion anomaly indicators and movement patterns for discovering low-level locomotion indicators, sensor data acquisition, and processing methods, as well as NDD detection algorithms considering their pros and cons. Then, we investigated the use of sensor data and Deep Learning (DL) to recognize abnormal movement patterns in instrumented smart-homes. In order to get rid of the noise introduced by indoor constraints and activity execution, we introduced novel visual feature extraction methods for locomotion data. Our solutions rely on locomotion traces segmentation, image-based extraction of salient features from locomotion segments, and vision-based DL. Furthermore, we proposed a data augmentation strategy to increase the volume of collected data and generalize the solution to different smart-homes with different layouts. We carried out extensive experiments with a large real-world dataset acquired in a smart-home test-bed from older people, including people with cognitive diseases. Experimental comparisons show that our system outperforms state-of-the-art methods

    The Trajectory of IT in Healthcare at HICSS: A Literature Review, Analysis, and Future Directions

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    Research has extensively demonstrated that healthcare industry has rapidly implemented and adopted information technology in recent years. Research in health information technology (HIT), which represents a major component of the Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences, demonstrates similar findings. In this paper, review the literature to better understand the work on HIT that researchers have conducted in HICSS from 2008 to 2017. In doing so, we identify themes, methods, technology types, research populations, context, and emerged research gaps from the reviewed literature. With much change and development in the HIT field and varying levels of adoption, this review uncovers, catalogs, and analyzes the research in HIT at HICSS in this ten-year period and provides future directions for research in the field

    Smart and Pervasive Healthcare

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    Smart and pervasive healthcare aims at facilitating better healthcare access, provision, and delivery by overcoming spatial and temporal barriers. It represents a shift toward understanding what patients and clinicians really need when placed within a specific context, where traditional face-to-face encounters may not be possible or sufficient. As such, technological innovation is a necessary facilitating conduit. This book is a collection of chapters written by prominent researchers and academics worldwide that provide insights into the design and adoption of new platforms in smart and pervasive healthcare. With the COVID-19 pandemic necessitating changes to the traditional model of healthcare access and its delivery around the world, this book is a timely contribution

    eHealth in hypertension and cardiovascular disease:Opportunities and challenges

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    In this thesis we investigate different aspects of eHealth for hypertension and cardiovascular disease, with a focus on remote monitoring programs for chronic care. We use the Dutch HartWacht program for patients with hypertension, cardiac arrhythmias and heart failure as an example that has been implemented in routine clinical care. We first focus on hypertension and identify areas that are attractive for future implementation of eHealth because of poor hypertension control. In the following chapters we present economical, legal and technical challenges that accompany eHealth implementation, in each chapter followed by potential solutions and opportunities. We identify success factors for cost-effective eHealth, provide a roadmap for GDPR-compliant solutions, present a novel technique for heartbeat detection through a bracelet and describe a protocol for efficient data handling in remote monitoring programs. In the second part of this thesis, we zoom in on the patients participating in eHealth programs. We evaluate the impact on quality of life of patients participating in the HartWacht program for cardiac arrhythmias and demonstrate equivalence compared to usual care. We then describe the feasibility of the HartWacht program for patients with hypertension in reducing blood pressure and present rationale, design and cohort profile of the Effectiveness of home-Monitoring of blood pressure in PAtients with difficult to Treat HYpertension (EMPATHY) trial. We conclude with an evaluation of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the uptake of eHealth in primary care in the Netherlands
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