Investigation of decision support for self-management of chronic conditions

Chronic conditions are the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the world. Traditional health care for people suffering from a chronic condition is expensive and consumes significant resources. This Thesis focuses on investigating novel applications of technologies and services to improve the...

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Main Author: Huang, Yan
Published: University of Ulster 2012
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Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.558784
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5587842015-03-20T04:13:24ZInvestigation of decision support for self-management of chronic conditionsHuang, Yan2012Chronic conditions are the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the world. Traditional health care for people suffering from a chronic condition is expensive and consumes significant resources. This Thesis focuses on investigating novel applications of technologies and services to improve the support offered to patients in the self-management of their chronic conditions. A decision support framework for self-management is proposed. It combines three theoretical perspectives: utilizing information gleaned from behavioural, psychological and biological interventions. A personal self-management system (PSMS), developed within SMART2, utilizes such a framework. It facilitates the integration of activity information, self-reporting, vital signs and lifestyle monitoring data. Approaches have been developed and applied to analyse the information collected and provide feedback to the 'patient' to assist with self-management. An orientation free adaptive step detection (OF ASD) algorithm was developed, deployed and evaluated with a smart phone equipped with accelerometers to detect levels of activity in the form of human steps. The advantages of the OF ASD algorithm following evaluation were found to be the self adaptive nature of the approach for each individual and the orientation free notion for smart phone placement. The accuracy and sensitivity of the OF ASD algorithm achieved performance rates of 93.4% and 93.2%, respectively. Furthermore, an approach was considered involving the identification of a patient's health status through self-reporting. Several feature selection and classification methods were evaluated and the optimal combination for the purposes of classification was reported. The results have indicated that a Multi layer Perceptron (MLP) based classifier had the best classification performance on an optimised subset of 10 questions. Based on the study it has found that the analysis of the lifestyle of a patient produces relevant knowledge that can be used to inform and promote behavior change on the part of the patient and to support self-management. Overall, the results from the research have demonstrated that assistive technologies and suitable algorithms have the capability to facilitate self-management for people with chronic conditions.362.196044University of Ulsterhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.558784Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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sources NDLTD
topic 362.196044
spellingShingle 362.196044
Huang, Yan
Investigation of decision support for self-management of chronic conditions
description Chronic conditions are the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the world. Traditional health care for people suffering from a chronic condition is expensive and consumes significant resources. This Thesis focuses on investigating novel applications of technologies and services to improve the support offered to patients in the self-management of their chronic conditions. A decision support framework for self-management is proposed. It combines three theoretical perspectives: utilizing information gleaned from behavioural, psychological and biological interventions. A personal self-management system (PSMS), developed within SMART2, utilizes such a framework. It facilitates the integration of activity information, self-reporting, vital signs and lifestyle monitoring data. Approaches have been developed and applied to analyse the information collected and provide feedback to the 'patient' to assist with self-management. An orientation free adaptive step detection (OF ASD) algorithm was developed, deployed and evaluated with a smart phone equipped with accelerometers to detect levels of activity in the form of human steps. The advantages of the OF ASD algorithm following evaluation were found to be the self adaptive nature of the approach for each individual and the orientation free notion for smart phone placement. The accuracy and sensitivity of the OF ASD algorithm achieved performance rates of 93.4% and 93.2%, respectively. Furthermore, an approach was considered involving the identification of a patient's health status through self-reporting. Several feature selection and classification methods were evaluated and the optimal combination for the purposes of classification was reported. The results have indicated that a Multi layer Perceptron (MLP) based classifier had the best classification performance on an optimised subset of 10 questions. Based on the study it has found that the analysis of the lifestyle of a patient produces relevant knowledge that can be used to inform and promote behavior change on the part of the patient and to support self-management. Overall, the results from the research have demonstrated that assistive technologies and suitable algorithms have the capability to facilitate self-management for people with chronic conditions.
author Huang, Yan
author_facet Huang, Yan
author_sort Huang, Yan
title Investigation of decision support for self-management of chronic conditions
title_short Investigation of decision support for self-management of chronic conditions
title_full Investigation of decision support for self-management of chronic conditions
title_fullStr Investigation of decision support for self-management of chronic conditions
title_full_unstemmed Investigation of decision support for self-management of chronic conditions
title_sort investigation of decision support for self-management of chronic conditions
publisher University of Ulster
publishDate 2012
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.558784
work_keys_str_mv AT huangyan investigationofdecisionsupportforselfmanagementofchronicconditions
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