Iot For Patients

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IOT

To embrace the Internet of things technology in the healthcare system, proper infrastructure
support equipped with cutting edge technology is important. Over the last decade, the
developing countries have also seen tremendous growth in the smart healthcare system which
was initially streamlined by the western countries alone.

According to an article published in autodesk.com, Nexleaf Philanthropic Relations


Coordinator Natalie Evans says “IoT and sensor technologies have an incredible potential to
overcome resource and infrastructure challenges in low-income countries.” The App
association forecasts predicted that 40% of the connected healthcare market will come from
developing countries.

IoT for Patients

Smart wearable devices for patients is an excellent technology which monitors and alerts the
healthcare professional for any abnormal health patterns or even emergency situation. These
are particularly useful for remote patients, senior citizens who live by themself.

Patients can now easily keep track of their heart rate, blood pressure, calorie intake and much
more. These stats help doctors to analyze the patient’s medical history and from the real-time
data, the medicines and the treatment plan can be modified accordingly.

IoT for Physicians

Now the clinical staff can get the patient’s whole database with a simple web browser. IoT
solutions in the medical sector help to maintain the transparency of patient detail across
departments which helps the physicians to quickly know the current health status with a single
dashboard system

In critical medical care like cancer, the Internet of things provides early detection mechanisms
and streamlines the drug delivery system to a whole new level. More IoT-based smart data-
driven decisions are made possible through the collaboration of medical researchers,
scientists, medical practitioners including Oncologists, neurologists, anaesthesiologists along
with pharmaceutical companies by connecting the medical devices, patient’s data and
behavioral patterns.

IoT for Hospitals

Device Theft can be avoided with the help of the medical asset’s geo-fencing and movement
detection sensors. That is, when medical equipment is moved beyond the permitted radius, the
notification and theft alert system alarms the concerned centralized hub notifying the required
personnel.

Automatically regulating the electric lighting system in the hospital not only saves the annual
utility bill but also helps to sync with the circadian rhythm of the cancer patients. Predictive
maintenance of high-end medical equipment can prevent huge maintenance costs or parts
replacement by regular sensor-based IoT monitoring systems for tracking medical asset’s
health.

Conclusion

The digital health solution is the trendsetter over the legacy healthcare solution. This digital
transformation was made possible by various IoT development companies who work with
current IoT technologies for building a better patient-doctor relationship and stepping into
predictive maintenance of the critical healthcare assets to reduce the cost and increase the
quality of the overall healthcare services worldwide.
blog.contus.com/iot-healthcare-solution

Healthcare as a big-data repository

Healthcare is a multi-dimensional system established with the sole aim for the prevention,
diagnosis, and treatment of health-related issues or impairments in human beings. The major
components of a healthcare system are the health professionals (physicians or nurses), health
facilities (clinics, hospitals for delivering medicines and other diagnosis or treatment
technologies), and a financing institution supporting the former two. The health professionals
belong to various health sectors like dentistry, medicine, midwifery, nursing, psychology,
physiotherapy, and many others. Healthcare is required at several levels depending on the
urgency of situation. Professionals serve it as the first point of consultation (for primary care),
acute care requiring skilled professionals (secondary care), advanced medical investigation and
treatment (tertiary care) and highly uncommon diagnostic or surgical procedures (quaternary
care). At all these levels, the health professionals are responsible for different kinds of
information such as patient’s medical history (diagnosis and prescriptions related data), medical
and clinical data (like data from imaging and laboratory examinations), and other
private or personal medical data. Previously, the common practice to store such medical records
for a patient was in the form of either handwritten notes or typed reports [4]. Even the results
from a medical examination were stored in a paper file system. In fact, this practice is really old,
with the oldest case reports existing on a papyrus text from Egypt that dates back to 1600 BC [5].
In Stanley Reiser’s words, the clinical case records freeze the episode of illness as a story in
which patient, family and the doctor are a part of the plot” [6].

With the advent of computer systems and its potential, the digitization of all clinical exams and
medical records in the healthcare systems has become a standard and widely adopted practice
nowadays. In 2003, a division of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and
Medicine known as Institute of Medicine chose the term “electronic health records” to represent
records maintained for improving the health care sector towards the benefit of patients and
clinicians. Electronic health records (EHR) as defined by Murphy, Hanken and Waters are
computerized medical records for patients any information relating to the past, present or future
physical/mental health or condition of an individual which resides in electronic system(s) used to
capture, transmit, receive, store, retrieve, link and manipulate multimedia data for the primary
purpose of providing healthcare and health-related services” [7].

Electronic health records

It is important to note that the National Institutes of Health (NIH) recently announced the “All of
Us” initiative (https://allofus.nih.gov/) that aims to collect one million or more patients’ data
such as EHR, including medical imaging, socio-behavioral, and environmental data over the next
few years. EHRs have introduced many advantages for handling modern healthcare related data.
Below, we describe some of the characteristic advantages of using EHRs. The first advantage of
EHRs is that healthcare professionals have an improved access to the entire medical history of a
patient. The information includes medical diagnoses, prescriptions, data related to known
allergies, demographics, clinical narratives, and the results obtained from various laboratory
tests. The recognition and treatment of medical conditions thus is time efficient due to a
reduction in the lag time of previous test results. With time we have observed a significant
decrease in the redundant and additional examinations, lost orders and ambiguities caused by
illegible handwriting, and an improved care coordination between multiple healthcare providers.
Overcoming such logistical errors has led to reduction in the number of drug allergies by
reducing errors in medication dose and frequency. Healthcare professionals have also found
access over web based and electronic platforms to improve their medical practices significantly
using automatic reminders and prompts regarding vaccinations, abnormal laboratory results,
cancer screening, and other periodic checkups. There would be a greater continuity of care and
timely interventions by facilitating communication among multiple healthcare providers and
patients. They can be associated to electronic authorization and immediate insurance approvals
due to less paperwork. EHRs enable faster data retrieval and facilitate reporting of key healthcare
quality indicators to the organizations, and also improve public health surveillance by immediate
reporting of disease outbreaks. EHRs also provide relevant data regarding the quality of care for
the beneficiaries of employee health insurance programs and can help control the increasing
costs of health insurance benefits. Finally, EHRs can reduce or absolutely eliminate delays and
confusion in the billing and claims management area. The EHRs and internet together help
provide access to millions of health-related medical information critical for patient life.

Digitization of healthcare and big data

Similar to EHR, an electronic medical record (EMR) stores the standard medical and clinical
data gathered from the patients. EHRs, EMRs, personal health record (PHR), medical practice
management software (MPM), and many other healthcare data components collectively have the
potential to improve the quality, service efficiency, and costs of healthcare along with the
reduction of medical errors. The big data in healthcare includes the healthcare payer-provider
data (such as EMRs, pharmacy prescription, and insurance records) along with the genomics-
driven experiments (such as genotyping, gene expression data) and other data acquired from the
smart web of internet of things (IoT) (Fig. 1).
The adoption of EHRs was slow at the beginning of the 21st century however it has grown
substantially after 2009 [7, 8]. The management and usage of such healthcare data has been
increasingly dependent on information technology. The development and usage of wellness
monitoring devices and related software that can generate alerts and share the health related data
of a patient with the respective health care providers has gained momentum, especially in
establishing a real-time biomedical and health monitoring system. These devices are generating a
huge amount of data that can be analyzed to provide real-time clinical or medical care [9]. The
use of big data from healthcare shows promise for improving health outcomes and controlling
costs.

Workflow of Big data Analytics. Data warehouses store massive amounts of data generated from various
sources. This data is processed using analytic pipelines to obtain smarter and affordable healthcare
options

Doyle-Lindrud S. The evolution of the electronic health record. Clin J Oncol Nurs. 2015;19(2):153–4.

journalofbigdata.springeropen.com/articles/10.1186/s40537

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