The Digital Health in the Pandemic Era
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9783036577326
- 9783036577333
- books978-3-0365-7732-6
- Medicine and Nursing
- Mental health services
- (d)health literacy
- AI
- artificial intelligence
- brain tumor
- breast neoplasms
- chatbot
- chest X-ray images
- chronic diseases
- classification
- CNN
- computer-aided diagnosis
- contact tracing
- COVID-19
- COVID-19 pandemic
- COVID-19 prevention
- data classification
- deep learning
- digital care visit
- digital contact tracing
- digital health
- e-health
- e-mental-health
- eHealth
- exergaming
- feature selection
- health
- health domain
- health intervention
- health literacy
- health strategy
- healthcare personnel
- human health
- hybrid learning
- image detection
- IMMUNI app
- IoT
- lock down
- logistic regression
- machine learning
- magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
- medical data
- medical imaging
- medical staff
- mental health
- mental stress
- mindfulness
- mixed-methods psychotherapy research
- mobile health
- n/a
- normative activation model
- obesity
- online consultation
- pandemic
- performance evaluation
- physical activity
- physical function
- prevention intention
- psychotherapy
- psychotherapy via telephone
- psychotherapy via videoconferencing
- qualitative psychotherapy research
- real-time system
- regression
- remote psychotherapy
- self-care
- social isolation
- students
- tele-health
- telehealth
- user experience
- YOLOv4
Open Access Unrestricted online access star
Digital health, virtual assistance, and telemedicine are terms often used interchangeably to refer to remote medical assistance, monitoring and care. Several studies and insights have developed these issues, analyzing the advantages and disadvantages and successes and failures and offering reflections on the implications and issues of these technologies in the health domain. The results of these investigations are affecting the redesign of hospital and outpatient management based on digital innovation using eHealth and mHealth. During the COVID-19 pandemic, this approach made it possible to offer assistance and continue care at home, protecting patients, preserving health workers, limiting the spread of the virus, and reducing the need for hospitalization. This reprint contains contributions dealing with the development of DH during the COVID-19 pandemic. The contributions are from various experts in different fields regarding the application of digital health, which, in some cases is also integrated with artificial intelligence, including digital contact tracing, mHealth, virtual reality, mental health, physiology, and rehabilitation.
Creative Commons https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ cc
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
English
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