203 research outputs found
Semantic Ontologies for Complex Healthcare Structures: A Scoping Review
The healthcare environment is made up of highly complicated interactions between many
technologies, activities, and people. Ensuring a solid communication between them is vital to ease the
healthcare management. Semantic ontologies are knowledge representation tools that implement abstractions
to fully describe a given topic in terms of subjects and relations. This scoping review aims to identify
and analyse available ontologies which can depict all the available use-cases that describe the hospital
environment in relation to the European project ODIN and its future expansion. The review has been
conducted on the Scopus database on January 13th, 2023 using the PRISMA extensions for scoping reviews.
Two reviewers screened 3,225 documents emerged from the database search. Further filtering led to a final
set of 32 articles to be analysed for the results. A set of 34 ontologies extracted by the identified articles
has been analysed and discussed as well. The results of this study will lead to the implementation of a
common integrated ontology which could hold information about healthcare entities as well as their semantic
relationships, strengthen data exchange and interconnections among people, devices and applications in an
expanded scenario which include Internet of Things, robots and Artificial Intelligence
Usability analysis of contending electronic health record systems
In this paper, we report measured usability of two leading EHR systems during procurement. A total of 18 users participated in paired-usability testing of three scenarios: ordering and managing medications by an outpatient physician, medicine administration by an inpatient nurse and scheduling of appointments by nursing staff. Data for audio, screen capture, satisfaction rating, task success and errors made was collected during testing. We found a clear difference between the systems for percentage of successfully completed tasks, two different satisfaction measures and perceived learnability when looking at the results over all scenarios. We conclude that usability should be evaluated during procurement and the difference in usability between systems could be revealed even with fewer measures than were used in our study. Š 2019 American Psychological Association Inc. All rights reserved.Peer reviewe
Managing healthcare transformation towards P5 medicine (Published in Frontiers in Medicine)
Health and social care systems around the world are facing radical organizational, methodological and technological paradigm changes to meet the requirements for improving quality and safety of care as well as efficiency and efficacy of care processes. In this theyâre trying to manage the challenges of ongoing demographic changes towards aging, multi-diseased societies, development of human resources, a health and social services consumerism, medical and biomedical progress, and exploding costs for health-related R&D as well as health services delivery. Furthermore, they intend to achieve sustainability of global health systems by transforming them towards intelligent, adaptive and proactive systems focusing on health and wellness with optimized quality and safety outcomes.
The outcome is a transformed health and wellness ecosystem combining the approaches of translational medicine, 5P medicine (personalized, preventive, predictive, participative precision medicine) and digital health towards ubiquitous personalized health services realized independent of time and location. It considers individual health status, conditions, genetic and genomic dispositions in personal social, occupational, environmental and behavioural context, thus turning health and social care from reactive to proactive. This requires the advancement communication and cooperation among the business actors from different domains (disciplines) with different methodologies, terminologies/ontologies, education, skills and experiences from data level (data sharing) to concept/knowledge level (knowledge sharing). The challenge here is the understanding and the formal as well as consistent representation of the world of sciences and practices, i.e. of multidisciplinary and dynamic systems in variable context, for enabling mapping between the different disciplines, methodologies, perspectives, intentions, languages, etc. Based on a framework for dynamically, use-case-specifically and context aware representing multi-domain ecosystems including their development process, systems, models and artefacts can be consistently represented, harmonized and integrated. The response to that problem is the formal representation of health and social care ecosystems through an system-oriented, architecture-centric, ontology-based and policy-driven model and framework, addressing all domains and development process views contributing to the system and context in question.
Accordingly, this Research Topic would like to address this change towards 5P medicine. Specifically, areas of interest include, but are not limited:
⢠A multidisciplinary approach to the transformation of health and social systems
⢠Success factors for sustainable P5 ecosystems
⢠AI and robotics in transformed health ecosystems
⢠Transformed health ecosystems challenges for security, privacy and trust
⢠Modelling digital health systems
⢠Ethical challenges of personalized digital health
⢠Knowledge representation and management of transformed health ecosystems
Table of Contents:
04 Editorial: Managing healthcare transformation towards P5
medicine
Bernd Blobel and Dipak Kalra
06 Transformation of Health and Social Care SystemsâAn
Interdisciplinary Approach Toward a Foundational
Architecture
Bernd Blobel, Frank Oemig, Pekka Ruotsalainen and Diego M. Lopez
26 Transformed Health EcosystemsâChallenges for Security,
Privacy, and Trust
Pekka Ruotsalainen and Bernd Blobel
36 Success Factors for Scaling Up the Adoption of Digital
Therapeutics Towards the Realization of P5 Medicine
Alexandra Prodan, Lucas Deimel, Johannes Ahlqvist, Strahil Birov,
Rainer Thiel, Meeri Toivanen, Zoi Kolitsi and Dipak Kalra
49 EU-Funded Telemedicine Projects â Assessment of, and
Lessons Learned From, in the Light of the SARS-CoV-2
Pandemic
Laura Paleari, Virginia Malini, Gabriella Paoli, Stefano Scillieri,
Claudia Bighin, Bernd Blobel and Mauro Giacomini
60 A Review of Artificial Intelligence and Robotics in
Transformed Health Ecosystems
Kerstin Denecke and Claude R. Baudoin
73 Modeling digital health systems to foster interoperability
Frank Oemig and Bernd Blobel
89 Challenges and solutions for transforming health ecosystems
in low- and middle-income countries through artificial
intelligence
Diego M. LĂłpez, Carolina Rico-Olarte, Bernd Blobel and Carol Hullin
111 Linguistic and ontological challenges of multiple domains
contributing to transformed health ecosystems
Markus Kreuzthaler, Mathias Brochhausen, Cilia Zayas, Bernd Blobel
and Stefan Schulz
126 The ethical challenges of personalized digital health
Els Maeckelberghe, Kinga Zdunek, Sara Marceglia, Bobbie Farsides
and Michael Rigb
Enhanced Living Environments
This open access book was prepared as a Final Publication of the COST Action IC1303 âAlgorithms, Architectures and Platforms for Enhanced Living Environments (AAPELE)â. The concept of Enhanced Living Environments (ELE) refers to the area of Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) that is more related with Information and Communication Technologies (ICT). Effective ELE solutions require appropriate ICT algorithms, architectures, platforms, and systems, having in view the advance of science and technology in this area and the development of new and innovative solutions that can provide improvements in the quality of life for people in their homes and can reduce the financial burden on the budgets of the healthcare providers. The aim of this book is to become a state-of-the-art reference, discussing progress made, as well as prompting future directions on theories, practices, standards, and strategies related to the ELE area. The book contains 12 chapters and can serve as a valuable reference for undergraduate students, post-graduate students, educators, faculty members, researchers, engineers, medical doctors, healthcare organizations, insurance companies, and research strategists working in this area
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