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Contributions to Interoperability, Scalability and Formalization of Personal Health Systems
Publicatietype: Proefschrift
Citatie:
Jaar: 2016
School: Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya - BarcelonaTech
Samenvatting: The ageing of the world’s population combined with unhealthy lifestyles are contributing to a major prevalence of chronic diseases. This scenario poses the challenge of providing good healthcare services to that people affected by chronic illnesses, but without increasing its costs. A prominent way to face this challenge is through pervasive healthcare. Research in pervasive healthcare tries to shift the current centralized healthcare delivery model focused on the medical doctors, to a more distributed model focused on the patients. In this context Personal Health Systems (PHSs) consists on approaching sampling technologies into the hands of the patients, without disturbing its activities of the daily life, to monitor patient’s physiological parameters and providing feedback on their state. The use of PHSs involves the patients in the management of their illness and in their own well being too. The development of PHSs has to face technological issues in order to be accepted by our society. Within them it is important to ensure interoperability between different systems in order to make them work together. Scalability it is also a concern, as their performance must not decrease when increasing the number of users. Another issue is how to formalize the medical knowledge for each patient, as different patients may have different target goals. Security and privacy are a must feature because of the sensitive nature of medical data. Other issues involve the integration with legacy systems, and the usability of graphical user interfaces in order to encourage old people with the use these technologies. The aim of this PhD thesis is to contribute into the state-of-the-art of PHSs by tackling together different of the above-mentioned challenges. First, to achieve interoperability we use the CDA standard as a format to encode and exchange health data and alerts related with the status of the patient. We show how these documents can be generated automatically through the use of XML templates. Second, we address the scalability by distributing the computations needed to monitor the patients over their devices, rather than performing them in a centralized server. In this context we develop the MAGPIE agent platform, which runs on Android devices, as a framework able to provide intelligence to PHSs, and generate alerts that can be of interest for the patients and the medical doctors. Third, we focus on the formalization of PHSs by providing a tool for the practitioners where they can define, in a graphical way, monitoring rules related with chronic diseases that are integrated with the MAGPIE agent platform. The thesis also explores different ways to share the data collected with PHSs in order to improve the outcomes obtained with the use of this technology. Data is shared between individuals following a Distributed Event-Based System (DEBS) approach, where different people can subscribe to the alerts produced by the patient. Data is also shared between institutions with a network protocol called MOSAIC, and we focus on the security aspects of this protocol. The research in this PhD focuses in the use case of Diabetes Mellitus; and it has been developed in the context of the projects MONDAINE, MAGPIE, COMMODITY12 and TAMESIS.
Trefwoorden:
Auteurs Brugues de la Torre, Albert
Toegevoegd door: []
Totaalscore: 0
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  • Albert-Brugués-Thesis.pdf
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