Yearb Med Inform 2012; 21(01): 83-93
DOI: 10.1055/s-0038-1639436
Survey
Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart

Smartphone as a Personal, Pervasive Health Informatics Services Platform: Literature Review

K. Wac
1   University of Geneva, Institute of Services Science, Quality of Life Group, Geneva, Switzerland
› Author Affiliations
The author is partially supported by the EU AAL research projects TraiNutri (09-2-129), WayFiS (10-3-014) and MyGuardian (11-4). The author thanks the reviewers for their constructive comments for improving the paper structure and content.
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
10 March 2018 (online)

Summary

Objectives

The article provides an overview of current trends in personal sensor, signal and imaging informatics, that are based on emerging mobile computing and communications technologies enclosed in a smartphone and enabling the provision of personal, pervasive health informatics services.

Methods

The article reviews examples of these trends from the PubMed and Google scholar literature search engines, which, by no means claim to be complete, as the field is evolving and some recent advances may not be documented yet.

Results

There exist critical technological advances in the surveyed smartphone technologies, employed in provision and improvement of diagnosis, acute and chronic treatment and rehabilitation health services, as well as in education and training of healthcare practitioners. However, the most emerging trend relates to a routine application of these technologies in a prevention/wellness sector, helping its users in self-care to stay healthy.

Conclusions

Smartphone-based personal health informatics services exist, but still have a long way to go to become an everyday, personalized healthcare-provisioning tool in the medical field and in a clinical practice. Key main challenge for their widespread adoption involve lack of user acceptance striving from variable credibility and reliability of applications and solutions as they a) lack evidence-based approach; b) have low levels of medical professional involvement in their design and content; c) are provided in an unreliable way, influencing negatively its usability; and, in some cases, d) being industry-driven, hence exposing bias in information provided, for example towards particular types of treatment or intervention procedures.

 
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