JCSE, vol. 6, no. 1, pp.39-39, 2012
DOI:
Preface for the Special Issue on uHealthcare
Sungyoung Lee, Chris Nugent
Kyung Hee University, Korea/ University of Ulster, UK
Abstract: The annual growth of the world’s economy in addition to recent achievements in the fields of medicine that have primarily
targeted at improving general levels of the quality of health are contributing to the increase of growth in the numbers
of older people within our population. The negative effect of this growth within the population is the increased
financial burden which is being placed on health and social care services. An opportunity is therefore available to address
a range of these challenges through the introduction of ubiquitous Healthcare (uHealthcare). uHealthcare involves the
automatic and intelligent provision of healthcare services through deployments of innovative and pervasive technological
solutions in an everywhere and any time fashion.
This special issue on uHealthcare focuses on current research and trends within the uHealthcare domain, specifically
focusing on the topic of Ambient Assistive Living (AAL) and associated communication infrastructures for uHealthcare.
The concept of AAL has now become widely accepted in research societies and has been recognized as attempting to
deliver improved solutions and services for older people. The topics of AAL are largely diverse covering a wide range of
areas from technological, social and economic perspectives. In this special issue a number of pertinent research issues
within AAL have been addressed. All articles submitted have been peer-reviewed by at least two reviewers and five
papers were finally selected to be published based on the reviewers’ recommendations.
The first paper of this special issue, entitled “Acoustic monitoring and localization in social care”, presents the concept
of utilizing acoustic signals for AALbased systems. Within the paper a range of different methods are described which
have been developed to utilize acoustic signals for event detection and classification in addition to localization of users in
monitoring and controlling contexts.
The second paper, entitled “Collective experience: A database-fuelled, inter-disciplinary team-led learning system”,
presents the framework which supports the collection and analysis of daily experimentations captured by medical records
of patients. The clinical knowledge is extracted from the recorded databases to support clinicians in predicting the utility
of diagnostic tests, interventions and in informing prognosis.
The third paper of this special issue, entitled “pHealth service deployment methodology ? A case study”, presents a
unified process methodology in the design and development of personalized health services.
The fourth paper, entitled “CardioSential: A 24-hour Heart Care and Monitoring System”, describes a newly developed
24-hour heart-care and monitoring system utilising smart phones and wireless devices. The paper discusses the relevance
of the new approach in the provision of valuable information for monitoring heart-rate and heart-disease with
low-costs and high levels of convenience.
The fifth and final paper of this special issue, entitled “Machine-to-machine communications for healthcare”, provides
an insight into the field of machine-to-machine (M2M) communication within the healthcare domain. A systematic
approach is presented which can support an effective system design in addition to th
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