Title :
An Ontology for Telemedicine Systems Resiliency to Technological Context Variations in Pervasive Healthcare
Author :
Larburu, Nekane ; Bults, Richard G. A. ; Van Sinderen, Marten J. ; Widya, Ing ; Hermens, Hermie J.
Author_Institution :
Univ. of Twente, Enschede, Netherlands
fDate :
7/7/1905 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Clinical data are crucial for any medical case to study and understand a patient´s condition and to give the patient the best possible treatment. Pervasive healthcare systems apply information and communication technology to enable the usage of ubiquitous clinical data by authorized medical persons. However, quality of clinical data in these applications is, to a large extent, determined by the technological context of the patient. A technological context is characterized by potential technological disruptions that affect optimal functioning of technological resources. The clinical data based on input from these technological resources can therefore have quality degradations. If these degradations are not noticed, the use of this clinical data can lead to wrong treatment decisions, which potentially puts the patient´s safety at risk. This paper presents an ontology that specifies the relation among technological context, quality of clinical data, and patient treatment. The presented ontology provides a formal way to represent the knowledge to specify the effect of technological context variations in the clinical data quality and the impact of the clinical data quality on a patient´s treatment. Accordingly, this ontology is the foundation for a quality of data framework that enables the development of telemedicine systems that are capable of adapting the treatment when the quality of the clinical data degrades, and thus guaranteeing patients´ safety even when technological context varies.
Keywords :
data structures; health care; information technology; medical information systems; ontologies (artificial intelligence); patient treatment; quality management; safety; technology management; telemedicine; ubiquitous computing; clinical data quality degradation; clinical data quality effect; communication technology; data quality framework; information technology; knowledge representation; medical case; ontology; optimal technological resource function; patient condition; patient safety; patient treatment adaptation; pervasive healthcare system; technological context characterization; technological context variation effect; technological context variation resiliency; technological disruption effect; technological resource input; telemedicine system development; telemedicine system resiliency; treatment decision; ubiquitous clinical data quality; Context; Medical treatment; Monitoring; Ontologies; Quality of service; Telemedicine; Context; Ontology; Quality of Data; Telemedicine; ontology; quality of data; telemedicine;
Journal_Title :
Translational Engineering in Health and Medicine, IEEE Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JTEHM.2015.2458870