Digital revolution in health
Series: Innovation, entrepreneurship, management ; Vol. 2Publication details: Wiley 2021 LondonDescription: 214pISBN:- 9781786306951
- 610.28 DIG
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Book | Jammu General Stacks | Non-fiction | 610.28 DIG (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | IIMJ-6773 |
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Table of Contents: Part I. The Health System and Digital Technology: Challenges, Issues, and Transformations 1. Digital Integration and Healthcare Pathways in the Territories 2. Digital Technology in a Cancer Patient's Primary-Secondary Care Journey 3. A Smart Health Record for Better Coordination: A Sociological Analysis of the Organizational Dynamics of the Calipso Project Part II. Digital Technology and Transformations in the Relationships between Professionals and Patients 4. Use of AI Systems in the Care Relationship, Redefining Patient and Physician Roles 5. Artificial Intelligence Ethics in Medicine 6. Digital and Public Health in West Africa Part III. Supporting Digital Healthcare 7. Designing and Innovating in Digital Healthcare: Co-design for Taking Patients' Needs into Account 8. Ethical Governance and Responsibility in Digital Medicine: The Case of Artificial Intelligence 9. Legal Focus on the Notions of Telemedicine and E-Health
In light of the impending arrival of artificial intelligence and robotics in medical practises, what sort of health care system do we wish to implement? The Covid-19 health crisis demonstrated the significance of digital technologies in the care of patients and their families, as ethics and relational practise demanded immediate attention. This book examines numerous feedback sources to reveal the many facets of so-called Medicine 4.0. It demonstrates the extent to which digital medicine necessitates new forms of organisation and new approaches to co-conception, in a logic that is resolutely patient-centric. The book concludes with legal and ethical perspectives to challenge the reader to truly be a "actor" in their own health care.
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