Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

IEEE Access Special Section Editorial: Health Informatics for the Developing World

Qadir, J.; Mujeeb-U-Rahman, M.; Rehmani, M.H.; Pathan, A.-S.K.; Imran, M.A.; Hussain, A.; Rana, R.; Luo, B.

Authors

J. Qadir

M. Mujeeb-U-Rahman

M.H. Rehmani

A.-S.K. Pathan

M.A. Imran

R. Rana

B. Luo



Abstract

We live in a world with growing disparity in the quality of life available to people in the developed and developing countries. Healthcare in the developing world is fraught with numerous problems such as the lack of health infrastructure, and human resources, which results in very limited health coverage. The field of health informatics has made great strides in recent years towards improving public health systems in the developing world by augmenting them with state-of-the-art information and communication technologies (ICT). Through real-world deployment of these technologies, there is real hope that the health industry in the developing world will progress from its current, largely dysfunctional state to one that is more effective, personalized, and cost effective. Health informatics can usher a new era of personalized health analytics, with the potential to transform healthcare in the developing world. In conjunction with mHealth and eHealth, many other important health informatics trends—such as artificial intelligence (AI), machine learning (ML), big data, crowdsourcing, cloud computing—are also emerging. Exponentially growing heterogeneous data, with the help of big data analytics, has the potential to provide descriptive, predictive, and prescriptive health insights as well as enable new applications such as telemedicine and remote diagnostics and surgery. Such systems could enhance the overall process of monitoring, diagnosis, and prognosis of diseases.

Journal Article Type Editorial
Publication Date 2017
Deposit Date Sep 23, 2019
Journal IEEE Access
Publisher Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
Peer Reviewed Not Peer Reviewed
Volume 5
Pages 27818-27823
DOI https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2017.2783118
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/1792514