1 / 16

Ubiquitous Computing for Independent Living

Ubiquitous Computing for Independent Living. Prof. Neil Bergmann School of ITEE, University of Queensland. Contents. Motivation Smart Home Communities of Care Ubiquitous Computing. Motivation. Western demographic changes Reduced birthrate Increased lifespan

Download Presentation

Ubiquitous Computing for Independent Living

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ubiquitous Computing for Independent Living Prof. Neil Bergmann School of ITEE, University of Queensland

  2. Contents • Motivation • Smart Home • Communities of Care • Ubiquitous Computing

  3. Motivation • Western demographic changes • Reduced birthrate • Increased lifespan • Larger proportion of elderly • Chronic diseases correlated strongly with age • More need for healthcare • Smaller workforce to service this need • Need for different healthcare models

  4. Health & Technology • ICT has already provided considerable efficiencies in:- • Communications, Logistics • Banking & Finance, Retail • ICT has good penetration into hospital care • Relatively poor penetration into community care

  5. Smart Homes • Technology can provide: • Explicit social alarms (alert pendant) • Implicit alarms (falls detection) • Safety and Security (entryphone) • Automation (lights, heating,..) • Education, Brain Gym • Physiological Monitoring • Social Networks • Enhanced Mobility

  6. Smart Homes • Lots of available technologies • We have enough gadgets • Lack of standardisation • Too many standards, or not enough? • Some excellent pilot installations • Still lack clear demonstration of benefits • Ad Hoc Design • What is best practice?

  7. Communities of Care • For the infirm elderly, there are many involved in their social and care networks: • Resident, spouse • GP, after-hours GP, specialists, hospital • Call Centre • Community nurses • Allied health (OT, dieticians, ...), Pharmacists • Meals on Wheels • Social Coaches • Family, friends

  8. Information Flows Carers Resident Carers Carers Carers

  9. Electronic Information Flows Carer Apps Distributed Health Record Apps Apps Carer Apps

  10. Ubiquitous Computing • Computers Everywhere • the Disappearing Computer • Communications Everywhere • Information everywhere • Access everywhere, everywhen, everyhow • Secure, reliable, dependable, intuitive

  11. Electronic Community of Care • Coordinated, Cooperating Information Systems which support the social and medical care of residents dealing with infirmity or illness. • Effectively, a particular application of Business Process Management, should be amenable to many of the same techniques.

  12. Defining Flows • Should existing information flows and workflows drive the specification of information systems to support these processes ? – can enshrine existing inefficiencies, add overheads without value. OR • Should new information flows and workflows drive the way carers operate? – a danger that carers actions are driven by software needs, not effective care.

  13. Information Architectures for ECoC • A suitable information architecture needs to support a wide range of information flows and workflows, rather than define one flow. • Methodologies needed to define suitable, flexible information flows within such a framework.

  14. Some Early Thoughts • Information in distributed databases • Secure messaging between databases and applications • Appropriate access rights based on roles • Specification of workflows for care needs • Specification of effective user-interfaces • Integration of sensors and actuators

  15. User-Centred Design • Different residents require different health management plans. • These can be implemented as (flexible) workflows within an ECoC system. • Unrealistic and inefficient to have health professionals designing ICT applications. • Suggests that ICT designers also need to be part of the care team.

  16. Conclusions • ECoC have the potential to provide better coordinated, better informed community care. • Smart Homes can be integrated as one component in an ECoC. • Need methodologies to specify individual care plans within an ECoC architecture. • ECoC are not just ICT systems, but require suitably trained ICT professionals as part of the care team.

More Related