DocumentCode :
1000100
Title :
Alerts in mobile healthcare applications: requirements and pilot study
Author :
Kafeza, Eleanna ; Chiu, Dickson K W ; Cheung, S.C. ; Kafeza, Marina
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Marketing & Commun., Athens Univ. of Econ. & Bus., Greece
Volume :
8
Issue :
2
fYear :
2004
fDate :
6/1/2004 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
173
Lastpage :
181
Abstract :
Recent advances in mobile technologies have greatly extended traditional communication technologies to mobile devices. At the same time, healthcare environments are by nature "mobile" where doctors and nurses do not have fixed workspaces. Irregular and exceptional events are generated in daily hospital routines, such as operations rescheduling, laboratory/examination results, and adverse drug events. These events may create requests that should be delivered to the appropriate person at the appropriate time. Those requests that are classified as urgent are referred to as alerts . Efficient routing and monitoring of alerts are keys to quality and cost-effective healthcare services. Presently, these are generally handled in an ad hoc manner. In this paper, we propose the use of a healthcare alert management system to handle these alert messages systematically. We develop a model for specifying alerts that are associated with medical tasks and a set of parameters for their routing. We design an alert monitor that matches medical staff and their mobile devices to receive alerts, based on the requirements of these alerts. We also propose a mechanism to handle and reroute, if necessary, an alert message when it has not been acknowledged within a specific deadline.
Keywords :
drugs; exception handling; health care; medical administrative data processing; medical computing; medical information systems; mobile communication; patient monitoring; telemedicine; adverse drug event; alert monitoring; communication technology; efficient alert routing; exception handling; healthcare alert management system; hospital routine; mobile device; mobile healthcare application; monitor requirements engineering; Biomedical monitoring; Drugs; Hospitals; Laboratories; Medical services; Mobile computing; Patient monitoring; Personal digital assistants; Routing; Ubiquitous computing; Computer Communication Networks; Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted; Feasibility Studies; Hospital Communication Systems; Information Storage and Retrieval; Mobile Health Units; Monitoring, Physiologic; Online Systems; Pilot Projects; Software; Software Design;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Information Technology in Biomedicine, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1089-7771
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TITB.2004.828888
Filename :
1303560
Link To Document :
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