Publication Type : Journal Article
Thematic Areas : Learning-Technologies
Publisher : Journal of Medical Systems
Source : Journal of Medical Systems, Volume 42, Issue 1, 1 January 2018, Article number 22
Keywords : Cloud computing, diet, exercise, Humans, India, Internet, Medicine, Ayurvedic, Monitoring, Ambulatory, Patient-Centered Care, Remote Sensing Technology, rural population, Yoga
Campus : Amaravati, Amritapuri, Coimbatore
School : Department of Computer Science and Engineering, School of Business, School of Engineering
Center : Amrita Center For Research in Analytics, AmritaCREATE
Department : Computer Science
Year : 2018
Abstract : Rural India lacks easy access to health practitioners and medical centers, depending instead on community health workers. In these areas, common ailments that are easy to manage with medicines, often lead to medical escalations and even fatalities due to lack of awareness and delayed diagnosis. The introduction of wearable health devices has made it easier to monitor health conditions and to connect doctors and patients in urban areas. However, existing initiatives have not succeeded in providing adequate health monitoring to rural and low-literate patients, as current methods are expensive, require consistent connectivity and expect literate users. Our design considerations address these concerns by providing low-cost medical devices connected to a low-cost health platform, along with personalized guidance based on patient physiological parameters in local languages, and alerts to medical practitioners in case of emergencies. This patient-centric integrated healthcare system is designed to manage the overall health of villagers with real-time health monitoring of patients, to offer guidance on preventive care, and to increase health awareness and self-monitoring at an affordable price. This personalized health monitoring system addresses the health-related needs in remote and rural areas by (1) empowering health workers in monitoring of basic health conditions for rural patients in order to prevent escalations, (2) personalized feedback regarding nutrition, exercise, diet, preventive Ayurveda care and yoga postures based on vital parameters and (3) reporting of patient data to the patient's health center with emergency alerts to doctor and patient. The system supports community health workers in the diagnostic procedure, management, and reporting of rural patients, and functions well even with only intermittent access to Internet.
Cite this Research Publication : Prof. Prema Nedungadi, Jayakumar, A., and Raghu Raman, “Personalized Health Monitoring System for Managing Well-Being in Rural Areas.”, Journal of Medical Systems, Volume 42, Issue 1, 1 January 2018, Article number 22