DocumentCode :
652100
Title :
Supporting N-Screen Medical Data Access in mHealth
Author :
Lomotey, Richard K. ; Deters, Ralph
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK, Canada
fYear :
2013
fDate :
9-11 Sept. 2013
Firstpage :
229
Lastpage :
238
Abstract :
The employment of mobile devices as the data consumption node in the medical domain (known as mHealth) is gaining widespread adoption since mobile devices facilitate remote and ubiquitous access to medical data. Today, it is a common phenomenon to see medical practitioners who own multiple mobile devices such as smart phones and tablets and expect to experience application consistency across the multiple devices. However, this expectation is hampered by the fact that mobile devices rely on wireless communication mediums which can experience sporadic disconnections. What is even challenging is the presence of the CAP theorem which states that considering the following three properties of a distributed system: consistency, availability, and partition tolerance, only two of the properties can be achieved simultaneously. In an ongoing research collaboration with the Geriatrics Ward at the City Hospital, Saskatoon, Canada, we deployed a reliable mHealth architecture that enables healthcare practitioners to use their n-mobile devices to access medical records. We proposed a brokerage platform that synchronizes the medical data on the multiple devices with careful consideration to the CAP theorem. Our proposed mHealth architecture is evaluated and the result in the real-world shows high support for scalability, real-time medical data propagation, and high capacity offline storage.
Keywords :
cloud computing; geriatrics; health care; hospitals; medical information systems; mobile computing; radiocommunication; smart phones; CAP theorem; City Hospital; N-screen medical data access; brokerage platform; data consumption node; distributed system; geriatrics ward; healthcare practitioners; mHealth architecture; medical domain; medical practitioners; medical records; multiple devices; n-mobile devices; offline storage; ongoing research collaboration; partition tolerance; real-time medical data propagation; remote access; smart phones; sporadic disconnections; tablets; ubiquitous access; wireless communication mediums; Availability; Hospitals; Mobile communication; Mobile handsets; Service-oriented architecture; CAP theorem; Health Information System; ROA; SOA; brokerage; mHealth; middleware; mobile cloud computing; mobile devices; ubiquitous cloud computing;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Healthcare Informatics (ICHI), 2013 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Philadelphia, PA
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICHI.2013.38
Filename :
6680482
Link To Document :
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