5 research outputs found
All for One and One for All: Dynamic Injection of Situations in a Generic Context-Aware Application
In a new smart-world, users are getting accustomed to fast-responding applications that make their everyday tasks and daily life easier. In order to meet their expectancies, mobile applications are shifting towards a new era of context awareness. Nonetheless, it seems that context-aware applications are still struggling to provide the user with a real situation understanding. They only consider non-evolving limited scenarios and react to them using only generic services. To address these concerns, we have developed the Long Life Application, a dynamic context-aware situation-based distributed mobile application dedicated to assist end-users in their everyday needs. This application considers the requirements of the users and provides them with the appropriate services according to their current context. In this paper we focus in the way that the user''s context is considered by the application. We propose a hybrid approach that combines both high-level context (top-down approach), by injecting user-related context, and a low-level context (bottom-up approach), by inferring it from sensor data. Peer-review under responsibility of the Conference Program Chairs
Sex-differential PTSD symptom trajectories across one year following suspected serious injury
Stress and Psychopatholog
Clinical management of emotions in patients with cancer: Introducing the approach "emotional support and case finding"
The current approach to the management of emotions in patients with cancer is "distress screening and referral for the provision of psychosocial care."Although this approach may have certain beneficial effects, screening and referral programs have shown a limited effect on patient psychological well-being. We argue that this limited effect is due to a mismatch between patient needs and the provision of care, and that a fundamental reconceptualization of the clinical management of emotions in patients with cancer is needed. We describe the rationale and characteristics of "emotional support and case finding"as the approach to the management of emotions in patients with cancer. The two main principles of the approach are: (1) Emotional support: (a) The treating team, consisting of doctors, nurses, and allied health staff, is responsive to the emotional needs of patients with cancer and provides emotional support. (b) The treating team provides information on external sources of emotional support. (2) Case finding: The treating team identifies patients in need of mental health care by means of case finding, and provides a referral to mental health care as indicated. We present a novel perspective on how to organize the clinical management of emotions in patients with cancer. This is intended to contribute to a fruitful discussion and to inform an innovative research agenda on how to manage emotions in patients with cancer