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JournalISSN: 1741-8453

International Journal of Electronic Healthcare 

Inderscience Publishers
About: International Journal of Electronic Healthcare is an academic journal published by Inderscience Publishers. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Health care & Computer science. It has an ISSN identifier of 1741-8453. It is also open access. Over the lifetime, 226 publications have been published receiving 2676 citations. The journal is also known as: IJEH.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a framework to assess a country's preparedness with respect to embracing e-health (the application of e-commerce to healthcare) and from this an ehealth preparedness grid to facilitate the assessment of any ehealth initiative.
Abstract: Whilst healthcare is the biggest service industry on the globe, it has yet to realise the full potential of the e-business revolution in the form of e-health. This is due to many reasons including the fact that the healthcare industry is faced with many complex challenges in trying to deliver cost-effective, high-value, accessible healthcare and has traditionally been slow to embrace new business techniques and technologies. Given that e-health, to a great extent, is a macro level concern that has far reaching micro level implications, this paper firstly develops a framework to assess a country's preparedness with respect to embracing e-health (the application of e-commerce to healthcare) and from this an e-health preparedness grid to facilitate the assessment of any e-health initiative. Taken together, the integrative framework and preparedness grid provide useful and necessary tools to enable successful e-health initiatives to ensue by helping country and/or an organisation within a country to identify and thus address areas that require further attention in order for it to undertake a successful e-health initiative.

140 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An appropriate mobile trust model for such a scenario in healthcare organisations is outlined by outlining an appropriate framework, in the context of wireless in healthcare, to understand and evaluate all the security issues let alone facilitate the development of systematic and robust solutions.
Abstract: In today's context of escalating costs, managed care, regulations such as the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and a technology savvy patient, the healthcare industry can no longer be complacent regarding embracing technologies to enable better, more effective and efficient practice management. In such an environment, many healthcare organisations are turning to m-commerce or wireless solutions. These solutions, in particular the mobile electronic patient record, have many advantages over their wired counterparts, including significant cost advantages, higher levels of physician acceptance, more functionalities as well as enabling easy accessibility to healthcare in remote geographic regions, however, they also bring with them challenges of their own. One such major challenge is security. To date, few models exist that help establish an appropriate framework, in the context of wireless in healthcare, in which to understand and evaluate all the security issues let alone facilitate the development of systematic and robust solutions. Our paper addresses this need by outlining an appropriate mobile trust model for such a scenario in healthcare organisations.

76 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that the application of the proposed networkcentric doctrine is arguably the best chance of changing the way healthcare is accessed, provided and managed both nationally and across the globe.
Abstract: Worldwide costs and the disparity between healthcare in the Western world and the developing countries increase exponentially. Increased involvement of ICT allows, in similarity to the military, a transition from platformcentric to more cohesive and collaborative networkcentric operations. In the information-intensive environment of healthcare, the networkcentric approach allows free and rapid sharing of information and effective knowledge building required for the development of coherent objectives and their rapid attainment. We suggest that the application of the proposed networkcentric doctrine is arguably the best chance of changing the way healthcare is accessed, provided and managed both nationally and across the globe.

74 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper derives several requirements of patient monitoring and shows how infrastructure-oriented wireless LANs, such as versions of IEEE 802.11, can be used to support patient monitoring in diverse environments.
Abstract: There is considerable interest in using wireless and mobile technologies in patient monitoring in diverse environments including hospitals and nursing homes. However, there has not been much work in determining the requirements of patient monitoring and satisfying these requirements using infrastructure-oriented wireless networks. In this paper, we derive several requirements of patient monitoring and show how infrastructure-oriented wireless LANs, such as versions of IEEE 802.11, can be used to support patient monitoring in diverse environments.

73 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An overview of the concepts and challenges of electronic home healthcare is provided.
Abstract: Telemedicine in homecare – also known as telehomecare (THC) or electronic home healthcare – uses telecommunication and videoconferencing technologies to enable a healthcare provider at the clinical site to communicate with patients in their home. Such an interaction is called a "virtual visit". Numerous applications are utilising commercially available monitoring devices and the internet to enable home-based disease management and monitoring. Prior to the implementation of telehomecare applications, one needs to address issues of accessible design, privacy and confidentiality of medical data, and reimbursement. The evaluation of such applications should focus on their impact on clinical processes, outcomes, cost of and access to care, patients' and providers' acceptance. This paper provides an overview of the concepts and challenges of electronic home healthcare.

71 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
202322
202237
20211
20201
20189
20178