2014 IEEE Healthcare Innovation Conference (HIC) 2014
DOI: 10.1109/hic.2014.7038928
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Affordable M2M enabled e-health using standard ban technology

Abstract: E-health technologies reduce the costs of social medical/healthcare system not only in developed but also in developing countries. Body area network (BAN) standards are accepted as a common communication method for portable medical and healthcare equipment. Machine-to-Machine technologies in conjunction with the BAN standards are expected to provide scalable and affordable e-health services. This paper discusses e-health activities and positions BAN within the activities. BAN is in a unique position to converg… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The presented patient monitoring solution blends both emerging and developed technologies to equip the global healthcare system with medical solutions capable of meeting the growing sector demands. This work is easily scalable and could quickly be utilized to include futuristic medical body-area sensor networks [67] [70] . Key drivers of this work include the global ageing population [47] ; increasing volume of chronic conditions [71] ; current international health economics; and the emergence of enabling technologies.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The presented patient monitoring solution blends both emerging and developed technologies to equip the global healthcare system with medical solutions capable of meeting the growing sector demands. This work is easily scalable and could quickly be utilized to include futuristic medical body-area sensor networks [67] [70] . Key drivers of this work include the global ageing population [47] ; increasing volume of chronic conditions [71] ; current international health economics; and the emergence of enabling technologies.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The organizing model also addresses issues such as organization dependency on partners or vice versa. For instance, Kuroda and Fukahori (2014) studied partnerships among providers of mobile health applications. The authors posit that the underlying ecosystem deals with the overall cooperation among different actors and that a business model requires clear roles among the companies involved.…”
Section: Organizing Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%