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Electronic healthcare : second international ICST conference, eHealth 2009, Istanbul, Turkey, September 23-15 [i.e. 25], 2009, revised selected papers

معرفی کتاب «Electronic healthcare : second international ICST conference, eHealth 2009, Istanbul, Turkey, September 23-15 [i.e. 25], 2009, revised selected papers» نوشتهٔ Patty Kostkova; Congress on Electronic Healthcare for the 21st Century، منتشرشده توسط نشر Springer London در سال 2010. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.

This book constitutes the thoroughly refereed post-conference proceedings of the Second International ICST Conference on Electronic Healthcare for the 21st century, eHealth 2009, held in Istanbul, Turkey, in September 2009. The 14 full papers presented and 10 technical presentations were carefully selected by over 80 submissions. The papers focus on topics such as telehealth and mobile health solutions, outbreak management, Web 2.0 and public health communications, EPR - trust, security and decision support, ICT support for patients and healthcare organizations, evaluation of ICT in healthcare, healthcare knowledge management and ontologies, Web 2.0, multimedia and personalisation, eHealth automation and decision support as well as European centre for disease preventation and control. 3642117449......Page 1 Lecture Notes of the Institute for Computer Sciences, Social-Informatics and Telecommunications Engineering 27......Page 2 Electronic Healthcare......Page 3 Preface......Page 5 Organization......Page 7 Table of Contents......Page 10 Introduction......Page 14 Model Checking......Page 15 Results......Page 16 References......Page 17 Introduction......Page 18 System Architecture......Page 20 Evaluation......Page 23 References......Page 25 Providing Information to Patients......Page 26 The eSana Framework......Page 27 Survey......Page 28 Diabetes Application Context......Page 29 Potential Effects of a Mobile Diabetes Solution......Page 30 Interpretation of the Survey Results......Page 31 Outlook......Page 32 References......Page 33 Introduction......Page 34 Preliminary Results......Page 35 References......Page 37 Introduction......Page 38 The ECDC Contacts and Organizations Database......Page 39 References......Page 40 Introduction......Page 41 Methods......Page 42 Settings and User Groups......Page 43 ‘Swine flu’ Use Example......Page 44 Conclusions......Page 46 References......Page 47 Introduction......Page 48 Three Strategies of Health Information Management in the Household......Page 49 Implications for System Design......Page 50 Design Principle......Page 51 Underlying Data Model......Page 52 The Target Users......Page 53 Conclusions......Page 54 References......Page 55 Introduction......Page 56 Formal Framework......Page 59 Medical Group Decision Support System......Page 61 References......Page 63 Introduction......Page 64 Difficulty in Defining Ownership of Data......Page 65 The Complexities of "Privacy" in a Networked World......Page 66 Privacy Legislation......Page 67 Personalized Medicine......Page 68 Personal Health Records and Personal Medical Monitoring......Page 69 Need to Provide Education and Technical Assistance for Consumers......Page 70 Conclusion -- Enabling Technology to Advance Health - Protecting Individual Rights - Are We Walking the Talk?......Page 71 References......Page 73 Introduction......Page 75 Sensor Placement......Page 76 Step Detection......Page 77 Fall Detection......Page 79 Conclusion......Page 81 References......Page 82 Introduction......Page 83 Materials and Methods......Page 84 Results......Page 86 References......Page 87 Introduction......Page 89 System Architecture......Page 90 Discussion and Future Work......Page 91 References......Page 92 Introduction......Page 93 Use of Triangulation for Semantic Web......Page 94 Sealife Results......Page 95 Semi-structured Interviews......Page 96 Validation......Page 97 Conclusion......Page 98 References......Page 99 Introduction......Page 101 Staffing Model......Page 102 Transient Approximations for GI/G/c(n) Model......Page 103 Adaptive Staff Planning Approach......Page 104 Staff Planning in an A&E Unit......Page 105 References......Page 108 Introduction......Page 109 ‘User Perceived’ versus User Actual Information ‘Searching Behaviour’......Page 110 Information Searching Investigation Methods......Page 111 Navigation on NeLI: Browsing and Searching......Page 112 Browsing and Searching Behaviour Details......Page 113 Cases Where the Users Reported Navigation Behaviour and Observed Behaviour Did Not Match......Page 114 Discussion......Page 115 References......Page 116 Introduction......Page 117 Design Considerations......Page 118 System Architecture......Page 119 References......Page 120 Introduction......Page 121 Experiments and Results......Page 122 Conclusions and Future Work......Page 123 References......Page 124 Introduction......Page 125 Study Design......Page 126 Findings......Page 127 References......Page 128 Understanding the Problem – Why ECDC Needs Interoperability Tools?......Page 129 Avoiding Reinventing the Wheel – What Is Out There?......Page 130 Results in Building Terminology, Operating the Terminology Server (TS) and Planned Next Steps......Page 132 References......Page 135 Introduction......Page 137 Materials and Methods......Page 138 Description of Medigrid Entities......Page 139 MediGRID and OpenEHR......Page 140 Conclusions......Page 142 References......Page 143 Introduction......Page 144 Medical Terminologies and Ontologies......Page 145 Approach......Page 146 Knowledge Acquisition Task......Page 147 Term Extraction and Mapping Analysis......Page 148 First Results Evaluation......Page 149 Concluding Remarks......Page 150 References......Page 151 Introduction......Page 152 Which Ontologies for Medicine?......Page 153 The NCI Thesaurus......Page 154 The Ontology Developed......Page 155 Use of the Ontology......Page 157 Conclusions......Page 158 References......Page 159 Development of the Process-Oriented Perspective in German Hospitals to the “Clinical Pathways”......Page 160 Modelling of Clinical Paths......Page 162 Limits of Process-Oriented Hospital Information Systems......Page 164 Architectural Concept of a Knowledge-Based Hospital Workflow-System......Page 165 Synopsis and Future Prospects......Page 166 References......Page 167 With Intègre®, Leverage Every Medical Professionals’ Skills and Expertise......Page 168 Introduction......Page 170 References......Page 177 Health 2.0......Page 178 Social Requirements......Page 179 CSCW in Healthcare......Page 180 Supported Autonomy......Page 181 Fluid Collaboration......Page 183 References......Page 184 The Early Approach to Elderly Care and the New Challenges in Web2.0......Page 186 The Federative Platform as Approach for Web2.0 in Healthcare......Page 188 The Contribution to Web 2.0 in Healthcare for Elderly......Page 191 Conclusions......Page 192 References......Page 193 Introduction......Page 194 The Landscape of German Healthcare Management......Page 195 Methodology and Design......Page 196 Results......Page 198 Discussion......Page 199 References......Page 200 The Local Initiative Context......Page 202 References......Page 204 Introduction......Page 205 Definitions......Page 206 General Model Concept......Page 207 Capacity......Page 208 Capacity......Page 209 Market Shares of Competing Care Providers......Page 210 Conclusion and Future Work......Page 211 References......Page 212 Introduction......Page 213 Trust Negotiation in Mobile Services......Page 214 Proposed Schema......Page 215 Protocol......Page 216 Token Generation and Management......Page 217 Security Capsule Implementation......Page 218 Conclusion......Page 219 References......Page 220 Introduction and Requirements......Page 221 Implementation Phases......Page 222 Author Index......Page 223 It is my great pleasure to introduce this special issue of LNSV comprising the sci- tific publications presented at ehealth 2009: The second Congress on Electronic Healthcare for the 21st Century, which took place in Istanbul, Turkey during September 23–25, 2009. Building on the first ehealth 2008 congress held in London, UK, the key topic of ehealth 2009 was investigating a realistic potential of the Internet in providing e- dence-based healthcare information and education to patients and global users. The proudly defined aim of ehealth 2009 –– bringing together the three medical sectors: academia, industry and global healthcare institutions –– was met and made the c- gress a truly unique event. The formal and informal discussions among the conference participants led to numerous stimuli for new collaborations. We accepted 26 full and 10 short technical presentations by speakers from all over the world, having received over 80 submissions. In addition to two keynotes, the commercial angle was provided by invited industrial speakers representing a wide range of healthcare IT companies including Corinne Marsolier of Cisco, Glenn Kenneth Bruun (CSAM Health), Luis Falcón (Thymbra) and Johan Muskens (Philips Research Europe), as well as international healthcare organizations such as Med-e-Tel represented by the international coordinator Frederic Lievens.
دانلود کتاب Electronic healthcare : second international ICST conference, eHealth 2009, Istanbul, Turkey, September 23-15 [i.e. 25], 2009, revised selected papers