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  2. Smart wearable system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smart_wearable_system

    Smart wearable systems for personalised health management: current R&D and future challenges, Lymberis, A., Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2003. Proceedings of the 25th Annual International Conference of the IEEE, 17-21 Sept. 2003, Volume: 4, pg 3716- 3719

  3. Remote patient monitoring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Remote_patient_monitoring

    The Veterans Health Administration (VHA), United States' largest integrated healthcare system, is an early adopter which became highly involved in the implementation and evaluation of RPM technologies. It has expanded use of RPM beyond common chronic disease applications, to post-traumatic stress disorder, cancer and palliative care.

  4. Preventice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preventice

    In August 2012, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the BodyGuardian Remote Monitoring System, a series of small wearable monitors created by Preventice in collaboration with the Mayo Clinic. The BodyGuardian system is to be used by doctors to track non-lethal arrhythmia or irregular heartbeats in ambulatory patients.

  5. Wearable technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wearable_technology

    Samsung Galaxy Watch is designed specifically for sports and health functions, including a step counter and a heart rate monitor. Wearable technology is often used to monitor a user's health. Given that such a device is in close contact with the user, it can easily collect data. It started as soon as 1980 where first wireless ECG was invented.

  6. Monitoring (medicine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monitoring_(medicine)

    Digital monitoring has created the possibility, which is being fully developed, of integrating the physiological data from the patient monitoring networks into the emerging hospital electronic health record and digital charting systems, using appropriate health care standards which have been developed for this purpose by organizations such as ...

  7. mHealth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MHealth

    The first factor concerns the myriad constraints felt by healthcare systems of developing nations. These constraints include high population growth, a high burden of disease prevalence, [47] low health care workforce, large numbers of rural inhabitants, and limited financial resources to support healthcare infrastructure and health information ...

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