1,636 research outputs found
Mobile consultant: Combining total mobility with constant access
Minimizing the time required for a medical consultant to offer his/her expert opinion, can be viewed as a life-saving procedure. We have designed and tested an integrated system that will allow a medical consultant to freely move either within, or outside the hospital, while still maintaining constant contact with the patients via videoconferencing and high-resolution imaging. The above system is explained in this paper, along with its advantages and its potential limitations. Conclusively, we demonstrate that such a system further increases the mobility of the medical consultant, while improving the healthcare service
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Mobile consultant: Evaluation of additional services
As the need for mobility in the medical world increases, newer systems and applications came to light; many of them based on wireless and mobile networks. PDA based systems were presented in the past, capable of videoconferencing and transmitting high quality images between a roaming consultant and a fixed point in the hospital. These systems not only had desirable characteristics but also incorporated additional services that were found of value: paging, Voice over IP calling, Internet, email, intranet, patient record update, etc. This paper presents an engineering and clinical evaluation of those additional services based on both objective and subjective criteria. It concludes that such complementary services can be desirable as they increase personnel mobility, utilize the hospital resources more efficiently while at the same time increase productivity and decrease the cost of hardware and communications
Mobile consultant: Combining total mobility with constant access
Minimizing the time required for a medical consultant to offer his/her expert opinion, can be viewed as a life-saving procedure. We have designed and tested an integrated system that will allow a medical consultant to freely move either within, or outside the hospital, while still maintaining constant contact with the patients via videoconferencing and high-resolution imaging. The above system is explained in this paper, along with its advantages and its potential limitations. Conclusively, we demonstrate that such a system further increases the mobility of the medical consultant, while improving the healthcare service
Using handheld devices for real-time wireless teleconsultation
Recent advances in the hardware of handheld devices, opened up the way for newer applications in the healthcare sector, and more specifically, in the teleconsultation field. Out of these devices, this paper focuses on the services that personal digital assistants and smartphones can provide to improve the speed, quality and ease of delivering a medical opinion from a distance and laying the ground for an all-wireless hospital. In that manner, PDAs were used to wirelessly support the viewing of digital imaging and communication in medicine (DICOM) images and to allow for mobile videoconferencing while within the hospital. Smartphones were also used to carry still images, multiframes and live video outside the hospital. Both of these applications aimed at increasing the mobility of the consultant while improving the healthcare service
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A smartphone-based Teleradiology system
The development of a teleradiology application for remote monitoring and processing of patient image data using 2nd generation mobile devices with enhanced network services, is of extreme interest, especially when the final means of display is a smartphone, a very light and compact handheld device. In the following paper the development of applications, that are responsible for remote monitoring and processing of medical images, is investigated
Computational modelling of pathogenic protein spread in neurodegenerative diseases
Pathogenic protein accumulation and spread are fundamental principles of neurodegenerative diseases and ultimately account for the atrophy patterns that distinguish these diseases clinically. However, the biological mechanisms that link pathogenic proteins to specific neural network damage patterns have not been defined. We developed computational models for mechanisms of pathogenic protein accumulation, spread and toxic effects in an artificial neural network of cortical columns. By varying simulation parameters we assessed the effects of modelled mechanisms on network breakdown patterns. Our findings suggest that patterns of network breakdown and the convergence of patterns follow rules determined by particular protein parameters. These rules can account for empirical data on pathogenic protein spread in neural networks. This work provides a basis for understanding the effects of pathogenic proteins on neural circuits and predicting progression of neurodegeneration
Project design with limited commitment and teams
We study the interaction between a group of agents who exert effort to complete a project and a manager who chooses its objectives. The manager has limited commitment power so that she can commit to the objectives only when the project is sufficiently close to completion. We show that the manager has incentives to extend the project as it progresses. This result has two implications. First, the manager will choose a larger project if she has less commitment power. Second, the manager should delegate the decision rights over the project size to the agents unless she has sufficient commitment power
Effect of disbonds on the fatigue endurance of composite scarf joints
The certification of scarf repairs requires that the repair is capable of handling flight loads in the presence of disbonds. This paper presents a study of the fatigue disbond growth behaviour of scarf joints. By determining the strain energy release rates of a disbond in a scarf joint subjected to a unit load, a predictive model based on linear elastic fracture mechanics is presented, which is shown to correlate well with experimental results. This method offers a promising technique for predicting the fatigue life of composite scarf joints with disbonds
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