Patient Monitoring for Personalized Mobile Health (PMH) based on Medical Virtual Instruments

Authors

  • B. Christina Sweetline Department of Computing Technologies, SRM Institute of Science and Technology, Kattankulathur, India
  • C. Vijayakumaran https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9460-067X
  • A. Samydurai

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3991/ijim.v17i16.42687

Keywords:

Personalized mobile health (PMH); medical composition; Mobile health; Patient monitoring;

Abstract


One of the newest technologies, mobile health, has the potential to support the provision of care for older adults and offer them individualised treatment. This study’s goal is to evaluate the benefits and challenges of personalised mobile health (PMH) for elderly residential care. Virtual worlds are quickly integrating into the landscape of instructional technologies. One of the most well-known of these settings is Second Life (SL). Despite the potential of SL for health professions education, there aren’t many official SL applications for this purpose, and the effectiveness of these applications hasn’t been evaluated to the fullest extent possible. Similarly, it appears that nothing is known about the use of virtual worlds for continuing medical education. In order to better grasp the fundamentals of the aid of MVIs for personal health monitoring (PHM), we were able to pinpoint the key disease regions, sensors, channels, calculations and communication protocols. The main obstacles limiting MVIs’ degree of integration into the international health care system were also identified. The analysis demonstrates that MVIs offer an excellent possibility for the creation of affordable, personalised health systems that meet the unique equipment requirements of a certain field of medicine.

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Published

2023-08-21

How to Cite

B. Christina Sweetline, C. Vijayakumaran, & A. Samydurai. (2023). Patient Monitoring for Personalized Mobile Health (PMH) based on Medical Virtual Instruments. International Journal of Interactive Mobile Technologies (iJIM), 17(16), pp. 82–94. https://doi.org/10.3991/ijim.v17i16.42687

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Papers