Information Systems and Technologies for Enhancing Health and Social Care Ricardo Martinho Polytechnic Institute of Leiria, Portugal Rui Rijo Polytechnic Institute of Leiria, Portugal Maria Manuela Cruz-Cunha Polytechnic Insitute of Cavado and Ave, Portugal Joao Varajao University of Tras-os-Montes e Alto Douro, Portugal Medical Information Science] Reference
Table of Contents Foreword xix Preface xxi Acknowledgment xxiii Section 1 Ambient Assisted Living Chapter 1 ineighbour TV: A Social TV Application to Promote Wellness of Senior Citizens 1 Jorge Ferraz Abreu, University ofaveiro, Portugal Pedro Almeida, Telmo Silva, University ofaveiro, Portugal University ofaveiro, Portugal Chapter 2 The Architecture and Early Findings of a Working SMS-Based System for Individuals with Mild to Moderate Depression 20 Elizabeth M. LaRue, University of Pittsburgh, USA Hassan A. Karimi, University of Pittsburgh, USA Ann M. Mitchell, University of Pittsburgh, USA Joy Y. Zang, Carnegie Mellon University, USA Chapter 3 Cloud Computing Enhanced Service Development Architecture for the Living Usability Lab 33 Claudio Teixeira, Universidade de Aveiro, Portugal Joaquim Sousa Pinto, Universidade de Aveiro, Portugal Fldvio Ferreira, Universidade de Aveiro, Portugal Andre Oliveira, Universidade de Aveiro, Portugal Antonio Teixeira, Universidade de Aveiro, Portugal Carlos Pereira, Universidade de Aveiro, Portugal
HSA, HSA, Section 2 Clinical Decision Support Systems and Healthcare Artificial Intelligence Chapter 4 Knowledge Acquisition Process for Intelligent Decision Support in Critical HealthCare ; Filipe Portela, University ofminho, Portugal Alexandra Cabral, SPMS, Portugal Antonio Abelha, University ofminho, Portugal Maria Salazar, Centro Hospitalar do Porto - Portugal Cesar Quintas, Centro - Hospitalar do Porto Portugal Jose Machado, University ofminho, Portugal Jose Neves, University ofminho, Portugal Manuel Filipe Santos, University ofminho, Portugal Chapter 5 An Operating Theater Planning Decision Support System Carlos Gomes, Universidade do Porto, Portugal Fabricio Sperandio, Universidade do Porto, Portugal Arnon Peles, Ben-Gurion University ofthe Negev, Israel Jose Borges, Universidade do Porto, Portugal Antonio Carvalho Brito, Universidade do Porto, Portugal Bernardo Almada-Lobo, Universidade do Porto, Portugal Chapter 6 Grid Data Mining Strategies for Outcome Prediction in Distributed Intensive Care Units Manuel Filipe Santos, Universidade do Minho, Portugal Filipe Portela, Universidade do Minho, Portugal Miguel Miranda, Universidade do Minho, Portugal Jose Machado, Universidade do Minho, Portugal Antonio Abelha, Universidade do Minho, Portugal Alvaro Silva, Centro Hospitalar do Porto, Portugal Fernando Rua, Centro Hospitalar do Porto, Portugal Chapter 7 Alzheimer's Disease Recognition with Artificial Neural Networks 1 Pedro Miguel Rodrigues, University ofporto, Portugal Joao Paulo Teixeira, Polytechnic Institute of Braganca, Portugal
The Section 3 e-therapy Chapter 8 Patient Centered Design: Challenges and Lessons Learned from Working with Health Professionals and Schizophrenic Patients in e-therapy Contexts 120 Catarina I. Reis, Polytechnic Institute of Leiria, Portugal Carla S. Freire, Polytechnic Institute of Leiria, Portugal Joaquin Fernandez, Polytechnical University ofcatalonia, Spain Josep M. Monguet, Polytechnical University of Catalonia, Spain Chapter 9 Do You Remember, or Have You Forgotten? 136 Anlbal Caixinha, Instituto Universitario de Lisboa, Portugal Vanessa Magalhaes, Instituto Universitario de Lisboa, Portugal Isabel Machado Alexandre, Instituto Universitario de Lisboa, Portugal Section 4 Electronic Health Records and Healthcare Information Systems Management Chapter 10 Adoption of Electronic Health Care Records: Physician Heuristics and Hesitancy 148 Jerald D. Hatton, University of Phoenix, USA Thomas M. Schmidt, DeVry College ofnew York, USA Jonatan Jelen, Parsons - New School for Design, USA Chapter 11 Proposal for Interactive Anonymization of Electronic Medical Records 166 Carlos Andres Moque Milldn, Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Colombia Alexandra Pomares Quimbaya, Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Colombia Rafael A. Gonzalez, Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Colombia Chapter 12 Advantages, Limitations, and Solutions in the Use of ERP Systems: A Case Study in the Hospitality Industry 178 Paula Serdeira Azevedo, Universidade do Algarve, Portugal Mario Romao, Instituto Universitario de Lisboa, Portugal Efigenio Rebelo, Universidade do Algarve, Portugal
Section 5 Medical Coding Chapter 13 Automated Generation of SNOMED CT Subsets from Clinical Guidelines 190 Carlos Rodriguez-Solano, University ofalcald, Spain Leonardo Lezcano, University ofalcald, Spain Miguel-Angel Sicilia, University ofalcald, Spain Chapter 14 A Semantic Web Pragmatic Approach to Develop Clinical Ontologies, and thus Semantic Interoperability, based in HL7 v2.xml Messaging 205 David Mendes, Universidade de Evora, Portugal Irene Pimenta Rodrigues, Universidade de Evora, Portugal Chapter 15 Ontological Representation and an Architecture for Homecare Pervasive Systems 215 Leandro O. Freitas, Federal University ofsanta Maria, Brazil Rafael T. Pereira, Federal University ofsanta Maria, Brazil Henrique G. G. Pereira, Federal University ofsanta Maria, Brazil Ricardo G. Martini, Federal University of Santa Maria, Brazil Bruno A. Mozzaquatro, Federal University ofsanta Maria, Brazil Jeferson Kasper, Federal University of Santa Maria, Brazil Giovani R. Librelotto, Federal University ofsanta Maria, Brazil Section 6 Medical Image Analysis, Enhancement, Sharing, and Archiving Chapter 16 Clinical Data Mining in Small Hospital PACS: Contributions for Radiology Department Improvement 236 Milton Santos, University ofaveiro, Portugal Luis Bastiao, University ofaveiro, Portugal Carlos Costa, University ofaveiro, Portugal Augusto Silva, University ofaveiro, Portugal Nelson Rocha, University ofaveiro, Portugal Chapter 17 Molecular Visualization with Supports of Interaction, Immersion, and Collaboration among Geographically-Separated Research Groups 252 Moacyr Francischetti-Correa, Universidade Federal de Sao Carlos, Brazil
Chapter 18 Cardiac Chamber Contour Extraction: Performance Evaluation of an Algorithm and Physicians 270 Diogo Roxo, University of Coimbra, Portugal Jose Silvestre Silva, University ofcoimbra, Portugal & Polytechnic Institute ofportalegre, Portugal Jaime B. Santos, University of Coimbra, Portugal Paula Martins, Pediatric Hospital ofcoimbra, Portugal Eduardo Castela, Pediatric Hospital ofcoimbra, Portugal Rui Martins, University Hospital ofcoimbra, Portugal Section 7 Mobile Health Chapter 19 Localizing a Weight Loss Mobile Application 294 Selma Limam Mansar, Carnegie Mellon University Qatar, Qatar Shashank Jariwala, Carnegie Mellon University Qatar, Qatar Maahd Shahzad, Carnegie Mellon University Qatar, Qatar Aysha Anggraini, Carnegie Mellon University Qatar, Qatar Nawal Behih, Carnegie Mellon University Qatar, Qatar Chapter 20 A Mobile Assistant to Aid Early Detection of Chronic Kidney Disease 309 Alvaro Alvares de Carvalho Cesar Sobrinho, Federal University ofalagoas, Brazil Leandro Dias da Silva, Federal University ofalagoas, Brazil Leonardo Melo de Medeiros, Federal Institute ofalagoas, Brazil & Federal University ofcampina Grande, Brazil Maria Eliete Pinheiro, Federal University ofalagoas, Brazil Chapter 21 Pedometer Cell Phone Applications and Future Trends in Measuring Physical Activity 324 Anna Akerberg, Malardalen University, Sweden Maria Linden, Malardalen University, Sweden Mia Folke, Malardalen University, Sweden Compilation of References 340 About the Contributors 377 Index 394