Litcius/Paper detail

An Architecture Supporting Intelligent Mobile Healthcare Using Human-Computer Interaction HCI Principles

Mesfer Alrizq, Shauban Ali Solangi, Abdullah Alghamdi, Muhammad Ali Nizamani, Muhammad Ali Memon, Mohammed Hamdi

2021Computer Systems Science and Engineering17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Recent advancements in the Internet of Things IoT and cloud computing have paved the way for mobile Healthcare (mHealthcare) services. A patient within the hospital is monitored by several devices. Moreover, upon leaving the hospital, the patient can be remotely monitored whether directly using body wearable sensors or using a smartphone equipped with sensors to monitor different user-health parameters. This raises potential challenges for intelligent monitoring of patient’s health. In this paper, an improved architecture for smart mHealthcare is proposed that is supported by HCI design principles. The HCI also provides the support for the User-Centric Design (UCD) for smart mHealthcare models. Furthermore, the HCI along with IoT`s (Internet of Things) 5-layered architecture has the potential of improving User Experience (UX) in mHealthcare design and help saving lives. The intelligent mHealthcare system is supported by the IoT sensing and communication layers and health care providers are supported by the application layer for the medical, behavioral, and health-related information. Health care providers and users are further supported by an intelligent layer performing critical situation assessment and performing a multi-modal communication using an intelligent assistant. The HCI design focuses on the ease-of-use, including user experience and safety, alarms, and error-resistant displays of the end-user, and improves user’s experience and user satisfaction.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceWearable computerHuman–computer interactionCloud computingArchitectureUser-centered designUser experience designHealth careInternet of ThingsWearable technologyMultimediaEmbedded systemArtEconomicsEconomic growthVisual artsOperating systemHealthcare Technology and Patient MonitoringContext-Aware Activity Recognition SystemsElectronic Health Records Systems