The Internet of Medical Things (IoMT) extends the concept of eHealth and mHealth for patients with continuous monitoring requirements. This research concentrates on the use of wearable devices based on the use of inertial measurement units (IMUs) that account for a gait analysis for its use in three health cases, equilibrium evaluation, fall prevention and surgery recovery, that impact a large elderly population. We also analyze two different scenarios for data capture: supervised by clinicians and unsupervised during activities of daily life (ADLs). The continuous monitoring of patients produces large amounts of data that are analyzed in specific IoMT platforms that must be connected to the health system platforms containing the health records of the patients. The aim of this study is to evaluate the factors that impact the cost of the deployment of such an IoMT solution. We use population data from Catalonia together with an IoMT deployment model for costs from the current deployment of connected devices for monitoring diabetic patients. Our study reveals the critical dependencies of the proposed IoMT platforms: from the devices and cloud cost, the size of the population using these services and the savings from the current model under key parameters such as fall reduction or rehabilitation duration. Future research should investigate the benefit of continuous monitoring in improving the quality of life of patients.
This research was partly funded by Catalan Government Research groups 2021SGR01623.
English
Digital health; Health platforms; Internet of Medical Things; Wearable devices; Inertial measurement unit; Gait analysis; Equilibrium assessment; Fall prevention; Surgery recovery; Primary healthcare
MDPI
Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.3390/info15050288
Information, 2024, vol. 15
cc-by, (c) Codina et al., 2024
Attribution 4.0 International
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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