Abstract :
The US healthcare Affordable Care Act established the 30 day readmission protection program as one of the base lines of measuring quality of care at hospitals and post discharge. With reduced payment penalties for hospitals with excessive readmissions, hospitals have increased their focus on managing post discharge care. With the emphasis on prevention and proactive care, integrated approaches that have the ability to collect relevant data from patients, process it efficiently and timely and predict risk patterns in advance and enable seamless collaboration between the patients and the care team is required. This allows care teams to proactively manage the care of the patient and limit complications and readmissions. Internet of things enabled collaborative cloud based e-health is evolving as one of the key transformation approaches in helping to address the 30 day readmission avoidance efforts. While the sensors provide critical data, there are significant constraints in terms of processing, power, storage and overall context. The power and capabilities of the cloud can augment the local visibility of sensors by providing capabilities that the sensors lack. In this work, we define these capabilities as the five P´s: Provisioning, Policy Management, Processing, Protection and Prediction. We argue that by bringing these elements together, the e-health architecture is able to take the data from sensors securely and transfer it to the cloud and generate insights and actions that help improve healthcare outcomes in a timely manner. The Cloud management plays a critical role in ensuring the integrity and availability of vital information. The blind spots in the unavailability of data or compromised data can result in missed opportunities for proactive care; ours proposed architecture ensures data availability, processing availability and integrity and thus is very important in a 30 day readmission context.
Keywords :
Internet of Things; cloud computing; hospitals; medical computing; patient care; risk analysis; 30 day readmission protection program; Internet of things; US healthcare affordable care act; care quality; compromised data; data availability; data unavailability; e-health architecture; healthcare outcomes; hospitals; loT enabled cloud based e-health; post discharge; post discharge care; proactive care; readmission avoidance efforts; reduced payment penalties; risk patterns; Context; Electronic mail; IEEE 802.15 Standards; Sensors; Wide area networks; 30 day readmission; Cloud; Collaboration; Internet of things; M2M; Management; Policy; Predictive Analytics; Sensors; e-health;
Conference_Titel :
Collaborative Computing: Networking, Applications and Worksharing (CollaborateCom), 2014 International Conference on