Listing 1 - 10 of 43 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Medical telematics --- Ubiquitous computing --- Medical informatics --- Clinical telematics --- Health telematics --- Telehealth --- Telecommunication in medicine --- Telematics
Choose an application
Medical telematics. --- Clinical telematics --- Health telematics --- Telehealth --- Medical informatics --- Telecommunication in medicine --- Telematics
Choose an application
Medical telematics --- Telecommunication in medicine --- Telecare (Medicine) --- Telemedicine --- Medicine --- Clinical telematics --- Health telematics --- Telehealth --- Medical informatics --- Telematics --- Standards.
Choose an application
Emerging Practices in Telehealth: Best Practices in a Rapidly Changing Field is an introduction to telehealth basics, best practices and implementation methods. The book guides the reader from start to finish through the workflow implementation of telehealth technology, including EMRs, clinical workflows, RPM, billing systems, and patient experience. It also explores how telehealth can increase healthcare access and decrease disparities across the globe. Practicing clinicians, medical fellows, allied healthcare professionals, hospital administrators, and hospital IT professionals will all benefit from this practical guidebook.
Medical telematics. --- Clinical telematics --- Health telematics --- Telehealth --- Medical informatics --- Telecommunication in medicine --- Telematics --- Telemedicine --- Equipment and supplies.
Choose an application
The technology underpinning the various types of Telehomecare available has been current for more than a decade, and the time is right for an evaluation of both the technology and the effectiveness of Telehomecare as a system which contributes to the delivery of care within the home. The field is complex, encompassing multiple applications which monitor things such as task oriented behavior; lifestyle; vital signs; environmental extremes (such as carbon monoxide levels); and passive personal emergency response systems. All of these applications are based upon the collection of data within the home by a device which translates that data into information and transmits it to an external location, prompting some type of action if necessary.This book brings together the views and experience of a wide variety of contributors involved in the research and application of Telehomecare. It is divided into two sections, containing contributions from the United States, the United Kingdom and the Netherlands. Each section, comprises chapters written from three different perspectives: research-based, business and the implementation of care. The authors include academic researchers, policy experts, individuals with direct business experience and care providers from each of the three countries.The book reflects on where Telehomecare is today and speculates as to what the future might hold for the field. It will be of interest to all those involved in caring for people in their own homes.
Home care services. --- Medical telematics. --- Clinical telematics --- Health telematics --- Telehealth --- Medical informatics --- Telecommunication in medicine --- Telematics --- Home health agencies --- Home health care --- Community health services
Choose an application
Medical telematics. --- World health --- Global health --- International health --- Public health --- Medical geography --- Clinical telematics --- Health telematics --- Telehealth --- Medical informatics --- Telecommunication in medicine --- Telematics --- Technological innovations --- International cooperation
Choose an application
Telehomecare systems have been in existence, in one form or another, for at least a decade. At the outset, the concept seemed to promise both a solution to controlling rising health care costs and a means of delivering the improved care which would enable the elderly to stay in their own homes for longer; but although it received enthusiastic support from governments and care professionals, as well as the commercial sector, adoption within a given community has not yet been achieved, and overall success has been limited at best.This book addresses the question of why, despite the investment of so much time, money and effort, Telehomecare is not more widely used than it is. The author describes his 20 years of experience in the field as a journey which started with a concern over his mother's health, and ended with himself and a colleague selling a series of patents to General Electric. Drawing on his experiences as an inventor, entrepreneur, businessman, implementer and researcher, he conducts a frank and thorough consideration of what has gone wrong, and offers an unflinching set of suggestions as to how to make it right.Telehomecare must become more than just a passive emergency response system if it is to have any chance of achieving its full potential. The analysis offered by this book will be of interest to all those whose work involves the development or implementation of Telehomecare systems.
Telecommunication in medicine. --- Medical telematics. --- Telecare (Medicine) --- Telemedicine --- Medicine --- Clinical telematics --- Health telematics --- Telehealth --- Medical informatics --- Telecommunication in medicine --- Telematics --- Telecommunication in medecine.
Choose an application
"The Doctor who wasn't there traces the long arc of enthusiasm for-and skepticism of-electronic media for health and medicine, showing that the same challenges now facing telehealth and the use of electronic medical records can be found in the medical reception of the telephone in the late nineteenth century and the radio, television, and mainframe computer across the twentieth. Wielding a rich trove of archival materials, physician/historian Jeremy Greene explores the role that new electronic media play, for better and for worse, in the past, present, and future of American health. Today's telehealth devices are far more sophisticated than the hook-and-ringer telephones that became widespread by the 1920s, the FM radio technologies used to broadcast health information in the 1940s, the televisions used to pioneer telemedical evaluation in the 1950s, or the first full-scale attempts to establish electronic medical records in the mid-1960s. But the ethical, economic, and logistical concerns they raise are prefigured in these earlier episodes, as are the gaps between what was promised and what was delivered. Each of these platforms produced subtle transformations in health and healthcare that we have learned to forget, displaced by promises of ever newer communications platforms to take their place. When is telemedicine good enough, and when is it not? And how do the uses of telemedical technologies shape patient relationships with health care providers? Who benefits and who suffers when new technologies are adopted? And what do these communication technologies, whose promised revolutions have all failed, bring to our understanding of health and disease?"--
Telecommunication in medicine. --- Telecommunication in medicine --- Medical telematics --- History. --- History --- Clinical telematics --- Health telematics --- Telehealth --- Medical informatics --- Telematics --- Telecare (Medicine) --- Telemedicine --- Medicine
Choose an application
Medical telematics. --- Clinical telematics --- Health telematics --- Telehealth --- Medical informatics --- Telecommunication in medicine --- Telematics --- Telemàtica mèdica --- Informàtica mèdica --- Assistència sanitària --- Salut pública
Choose an application
This book describes digital ophthalmology and telemedicine applications for both front of the eye and retina. It includes technical issues, digital imaging, what clinical parameters to use, which technologies are suitable, and collective experiences of practitioners in different parts of the world practicing a wide range of digital eye care delivery. The main purpose of this book is to provide adequate information to clinicians and other health professionals who are involved in eye care delivery to assess how digital health in ophthalmology might be applied to their working practice, how digital screenings are performed, and to learn about virtual image reading. Many of the chapters are also helpful to health service managers, imaging specialists, and information technology staff. Digital Eye Care and Teleophthalmology: A Practical Guide to Applications examines digital eye care to provide state of art ophthalmic services. It is an essential resource for professionals involved in eye care seeking to develop or improve their digital applications in daily practice.
Eye --- Medical telematics. --- Ophthalmology. --- Telecommunication in medicine. --- Diseases --- Diagnosis. --- Telecare (Medicine) --- Telemedicine --- Medicine --- Clinical telematics --- Health telematics --- Telehealth --- Medical informatics --- Telecommunication in medicine --- Telematics
Listing 1 - 10 of 43 | << page >> |
Sort by
|