Technological Ecosystems in Care and Assistance: A Systematic Literature Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Related Work
- The papers were written in English AND
- The papers were published in peer reviewed Journals, Books, Conferences or Workshops AND
- The papers performed a systematic review of the existing literature AND
- The systematic review focused on digital/technological/software ecosystems AND
- The technological ecosystems are within the care, assistance or health sector AND
- To speed up the screening process, the criteria 1 and 2 were first considered and we took into account the paper language, the publication venue, and if the paper abstract was available.
- Then the reviewers manually applied criteria 3 and 4, reading through titles and abstracts of the downloaded studies in order to assess if the resultant papers performed a review focused on digital, technological or software ecosystems. A paper fulfilled these criteria if: the title or abstract contained the term ecosystem, and the title or abstract suggested that the authors could have performed a systematic review related to the topic.In the few cases where the title and abstract were not sufficient to make a decision, the authors quickly assessed the entire content of the paper. In these cases, reviews were taken into account if they at least outlined the protocol followed for obtaining relevant literature from the scientific databases. On the other hand, they were considered to be related technological, software or digital ecosystems if the paper addressed the notion of ecosystem on either its business, organizational or software structure. That is, rather than just considering dedicated solutions, platforms or system of systems, the paper should consider the evolutionary characteristics of the ecosystems and at least refer to the actors involved. Papers were included in the next stages only if both reviewers agreed they fulfilled the inclusion criteria.After these first two rounds the resultant candidate papers were labeled as “Candidate for full paper reading” in the spreadsheet (http://bit.ly/2Pfr9xT), obtaining a total of 24 candidate papers. It has to be noted that also during the assessment of this criteria three cases were detected with missing abstracts that could be candidates for full paper reading based just on the paper title, so they were also included in the next step.
- The entire content of those 21 papers was assessed in order to see if all or at least some of the research or mapping questions in these systematic reviews were indeed related to the health or care sector. Papers that were compliant with this criteria were labeled as “Related to healthcare” in the spreadsheet.
- the term “ecosystem” if included as a single search keyword produces a great amount of results related to biological sciences but which are not related to the technological field.
- “health” is a keyword that mainly refers to the concept of the well-functioning of an ecosystem. Hence, the term “ecosystem health” is employed in many studies as the ability of the ecosystem to endure and remain variable and productive over time [12], and could mislead to some results not related to the care and assistance sectors.
- it is necessary to broaden the search with the selected search string as there is a limited number of publications related to ecosystems in healthcare.
3. Methods
3.1. Review Scope
- Population (P): the target group for the investigation. As we are interested in two areas simultaneously—technological ecosystems and care—, our population is, in fact, a conjunction of those two populations.
- Intervention (I): specifies the investigation aspects or issues of interest for the researchers. In our case the design, implementations, components, performance evaluations, etc. of technological ecosystems proposals.
- Comparison (C): refers to aspect of the investigation with which the intervention is being compared to. No comparison intervention has been planned in our study.
- Outcomes (O): the effect of the intervention. We seek ecosystem proposals related to care and assistance as well as real implementations
- Context (C): the setting or environment of the investigation. In our case, they are those environments related to care and assistance (in healthcare, industry, academia, etc.).
Mapping Questions
- MQ1.1 What definitions of care and assistance ecosystems are given in the literature?
- MQ1.2 How has the research field of care and assistance ecosystems evolved over time? I.e., number of publications per year.
- MQ1.3 What are the main publication venues?
- MQ1.4 Who are the most active authors in the area?
- MQ2.1 What is the ecosystem goal in terms of care and assistance?
- MQ2.2 What care and assistance services are provided?
- MQ2.3 Who are the main actors and what are their value propositions?
- MQ2.4 How can actors enhance the ecosystem functionalities?
- MQ2.5 What is the ecosystem maturity? I.e., have proposals been deployed in real world conditions or only conceptual architectures?
- MQ3.1 What type of ecosystem architectures have been proposed in the literature?
- MQ3.2 What modelling notation and guidelines have been employed for describing the ecosystem architecture?
- MQ3.3 What sensor technologies are employed for providing care and assistance services?
- MQ3.4 How are sensors integrated in those architectures?
- MQ3.5 How do sensor technologies take into account the care and assistance environment? I.e., do they follow medical standards?
- MQ3.6 Are there complementary training actions considered in the ecosystem? E.g., in terms of technology usage, devices integration, etc.
3.2. Database Selection
- The database is available for us through our institution.
- The database is capable of using logical expressions or a similar mechanism.
- The database allows full-length searches or searches only in specific fields of the works.
- The database allows additional filtering options such as publication year or publication language.
- The database is one of the most relevant in the research areas of interest in this review process: engineering, computer science, and care and assistance technologies.
3.3. Search String
3.4. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
- Papers should address technological ecosystems related to care and assistance technologies.
- Only papers published between 2003 and 2018.
- Papers published in peer reviewed Journals, Books, Conferences or Workshops.
- Papers written in English.
- Papers that have a document body that is more than three pages long.
- Papers’ abstract cosine distance to any of the three prototype abstracts is less than 0.96.
3.5. Quality Assessment Criteria
3.6. Review and Mapping Protocol
- The search was conducted in the databases indicated in Section 3.2 and using the query string described in Section 3.3 with the database filtering options enumerated in Section 3.4. All the results were collected in .csv format. The downloaded list of candidate papers included for each document: title, abstract, authors, publication year, publication venue, etc.
- The inclusion criteria was then applied to the downloaded list of candidate papers. In order to reduce the number of results to be manually analyzed, the automated abstract similarity inclusion criteria was first applied, restricting the list of candidate papers to 809. Results from this first selection are shown in (http://bit.ly/2BpCxV0).
- The resultant papers were then assessed for complying the rest of the inclusion criteria of Section 3.2 based on their title and abstract. In those cases where the title and abstract were not sufficient to make a decision, the authors quickly assessed the entire content of the paper. The resultant candidate papers were added to another sheet of the spreadsheet document (http://bit.ly/2Mkfujv).
- The papers were then read in detail and analyzed based on the quality assessment checklist described in Table 3) and the results were collected in another spreadsheet (http://bit.ly/2xXUxRu). In addition, during this assessment we considered papers collected within the references of those ones that potentially could be interesting for the review and mapping process, and the same quality assessment was performed over them. This last step provided the authors with another 5 papers to review.
3.7. Data Extraction
- Ecosystem goal: (IL) Independent Living; (OL) Occupation in Life; (R) Recreation; (HC) Health and Care; (O) Other
- Care and assistance services provided: (R) Reminder and information services (medication reminders, social events notification, alarm alerts); (S) Social interaction and support (social networks, teleconference with relatives/friends); (HC) Health or Care services (patient’s health physical or remote monitoring and feedback); (EM) Environmental Monitoring (alarms based on home sensors, errand detection) (RH) Rehabilitation and maintenance services (serious games, physical exercises); (O) Other. In those cases where a described top-level service involved two or more of these categories (for example, a doctor can elicit a medication reminder based on the patient’s health parameters) both service labels were considered.
- Who are the patient end users: (E) Elder users; (D) Disabled users, (CD) Patients with Chronic Diseases; (O) Others.
- Which actors that contribute to value co-creation are pointed out in the ecosystem: (HC) Health Care related actors (doctors, nurses, etc. either individuals or organizations); (P) Patients (patients and their next-of-kin); (F) Funders (Public funding agencies, private investors, etc.); (R) Regulatory parties; (SP) Software/technology Providers (provide software support or services, sensor devices, etc.) (GP) Goods Providers (pharmaceuticals or others); (ED) Educational / research institutions.
- How can actors add/modify ecosystem functionalities: (ID) Including new Devices; (ISO) Including new SOftware (MSO) Modifying existing Software; (NS) adding New Services; (MS) Modifying existing Services (e.g., doctors or authorities can change existing service contents.
- Ecosystem maturity: (C) conceptualization (e.g., an architecture and services proposal); (P) Piloted without real users; (PU) Piloted with real Users; (D) Deployed in real world
- Type of ecosystem architectures: We use the classification proposed by [42]: (C) Cornerstone Ecosystems; (S) Standard-based Ecosystems; (P) Protocol-based Ecosystems; (I) Infrastructure-based Ecosystems
- Software structure model notation and guidelines. Here we use the same notation as the one employed in [13]: (A) Ad hoc; (T) Tabular; (M) Metamodel; (C) Class diagram; (CM) Conceptual Map; (S) SNA.
- Sensor technologies employed for providing services: (A) Ambient sensors (e.g., temperature, humidity); (L) Localization and presence sensors (e.g., GPS, sonars); (B) Body sensors/medical devices (e.g., blood sensors, temperature sensors, EMGs, ECGs); (M) smart/Mobile technologies (mobile phones, PDAs, tablets, smartwatch, SmartTVs); (C) Cameras; (O) Other
- Sensors integration approaches: (N) not described; (P) Point-to-point; (M) Middleware based; (SO) Service Oriented;
- Do these technologies follow standards or are they ad hoc solutions: (S) Standards; (A) Ad hoc solutions
- Complementary training actions: (SD) on Software Development of new functionalities; (SI) on Systems Integration (e.g., adding new devices to the system); (TU) on Technology Usage (e.g., providing information to end-users/caregivers; (HE) on Health Education (e.g., best practices during rehabilitation); (O) Other
4. Results
4.1. Definitions of Technological Care and Assistance Ecosystems Given in the Literature—MQ1.1
4.2. Evolution Over Time of the Research Field of Care and Assistance Ecosystems—MQ1.2
4.3. Main Publication Venues—MQ1.3
4.4. Most Active Authors in the Area—MQ1.4
4.5. Ecosystem Goal—MQ2.1
- Independent living—assist in normal daily life activities e.g., tasks at home, mobility, safety, agenda management (memory help), etc.
- Health and care—health monitoring, disease prevention, and compensation for disabilities.
- Occupation in life—the continuation of professional activities along the aging process.
- Recreation—facilitate socialization and participation in leisure activities.
4.6. Care and Assistance Services Provided—MQ2.2
4.7. Who Are the Ecosystem Actors—MQ2.3
4.8. How Can Actors Add/Modify Ecosystem Functionalities—MQ2.4
4.9. Ecosystem Maturity—MQ2.5
4.10. Ecosystem Architectures Proposed in Care and Assistance Environments—MQ3.1
- Cornerstone Ecosystems: where actors interact on top of a common software platform and usually extend the platform’s functionality. Thus the existence of a technological platform is of central importance for an ecosystem of this type. The structure and governance of this type of ecosystem is usually centralized. Examples of this type of ecosystem are Android or the AppStore.
- Standard-based Ecosystems: where instead of a common platform, the compliance to standards is the key requirement for contributing in the ecosystem. Usually, compliance to standards is set above the functionalities and concrete realization of the contributions.
- Protocol-based Ecosystems: where a protocol API is shared among all actors, providing more flexibility over technical contributions to the ecosystem. Protocols are a less restrictive and more flexible technical linchpin of ecosystems. They provide a predefined specification of interaction of contributions with each other (e.g., exchange of data, call of software services).
- Infrastructure-based Ecosystems: where a common technology is shared among all actors, providing tools at development time but at the same time maintaining independence on the contributions. Usually, the interaction among actors are on a social level. Examples of this type of ecosystem are Gnome or Github.
4.11. Model Notation and Guidelines for Describing the Ecosystem Architecture—MQ3.2
4.12. Sensor Technologies Employed for Providing Care and Assistance Services—MQ3.3
4.13. Sensor Integration in the Ecosystem—MQ3.4
4.14. How Sensor Technologies Take into Account the Care and Assistance Environment—MQ3.5
- Health Level-7 or HL7 [76] refers to a set of international standards produced by the Health Level Seven International and adopted by the American National Standards Institute and the International Organization for Standardization. They provide standard guidelines for transfer of clinical and administrative data between software applications.
- XDS.b [77] is an standard promoted by the Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise (IHE) for exchanging a variety of different document types across a network of independent healthcare providers.
- CEN ISO/IEEE 11073 [78]—to enable communication between medical, health care and wellness devices and with external computer systems. Provides means to communicate devices with upper levels (for example with HL7)
- ISO 13940:2015 [79]—covers the concept definitions needed whenever structured information in healthcare is specified as a requirement. The definitions are intended to refer to the conceptual level only and not to details of implementation.
- HIPAA [80] (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) (software)—USA law approved in 1996 which establishes (among others) standards for electronic health medical transactions
4.15. Complementary Training Actions—MQ3.6
5. Discussion
5.1. How Are Care and Assistance Technological Ecosystems Approached in the Literature—RQ1
5.1.1. Ecosystem Definitions
5.1.2. Evolution of Publications
5.2. Main Distinctive Characteristics of Health and Care Ecosystems—RQ2
5.2.1. Ecosystem Goal and Services
5.2.2. Main Actors and Value Propositions
5.2.3. Adding Functionalities to the Ecosystem
5.2.4. Ecosystem Maturity
5.3. How Sensor Technologies Are Integrated in the Ecosystem Proposals—RQ3
5.3.1. Ecosystem Architectures
5.3.2. Employed Sensor Technologies and Devices
5.3.3. Sensor Integration in the Ecosystem
5.3.4. Considered Training Actions
6. Threats to Validity
7. Challenges, Gaps and Opportunities
- Remote access to the relevant care records. Doctors have quick and direct access to patient records, which they can share quickly and safely.
- More effective and assisted clinical decision making. Health authorities and institutions have the possibility of evaluating the effectiveness in assistance provision, allowing them to take decisions in the care provision systems. The interconection of health and care staff also makes it possible for people to receive more personalized and precise care services—reducing errors.
- Real-time monitoring of structured patient care delivery. Which allows a more personalized attention for example via portals that make it possible for people to browse through the available doctors and carers, read patient feedback and book their next doctor’s appointment, thus improving quality and providing easier access to medical facilities. The evolution and adoption of new and cheaper sensor technology allows to better provision home monitoring systems and integrate new services.
- Opportunity for patient (and carers) participation in the care process. Increasing the communication amongst different ecosystem actors not only allows doctors, hospitals and care institutions to be more accessible to patients, but also helps patients to connect with other patients. Furthermore, it allows patients and carers to be aware of treatment options along with preventive measures.
- Stats and management information which are a product of the care process. The information extracted from the ecosystem information exchange (taking into account privacy and security issues) allows the establishment of new business models that could attract other stakeholders even not directly related to the care provision.
8. Conclusions
- There is not a single concrete definition that encompasses all the characteristics of a care and assistance ecosystem. However, most definitions share common characteristics in terms of providing technological means to a community of users (patients, relatives, carers, doctors, etc.) in order to involve all of them in providing better care and assistance related services.
- The field of technological ecosystems in care and assistance is indeed an emerging field, as most publications found date from 2011 onwards.
- Most of the papers’ main efforts are focused on developing ecosystems where actors interact on top of a common technological platform, either developed from scratch or adapted from existing infrastructures and where the governance is usually centralized.
- The maturity of the ecosystems found in the literature is mainly conceptual, however, some of these conceptualizations have been evolved to concrete solutions.
- Ecosystems are usually user-centred rather than stakeholder-centred, where aggregated services and architectures are mainly focused on the patient end users. Few ecosystems take stakeholders into account during the designing stage.
- Employed devices for providing services are of a very diverse nature depending on the intended services, but many of them do not take into account medical standards.
- As platform or infrastructure centred ecosystems, the degree of the ecosystems’ openness to new devices greatly depends on the followed methodology for device integration within the service chain. Service oriented middleware (SOM) is the preferred approach in the studied papers.
- There is a lack of training actions considered in order to facilitate or even create the relationship between the different ecosystem actors and the underlying technological components.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
- De Carvalho, I.A.; Epping-Jordan, J.; Pot, A.M.; Kelley, E.; Toro, N.; Thiyagarajan, J.A.; Beard, J.R. Organizing integrated health-care services to meet older people’s needs. Bull. World Health Organ. 2017, 95, 756–763. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Wang, Z.; Yang, Z.; Dong, T. A Review of Wearable Technologies for Elderly Care that Can Accurately Track Indoor Position, Recognize Physical Activities and Monitor Vital Signs in Real Time. Sensors 2017, 17, 341. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Camarinha-Matos, L.M.; Rosas, J.; Oliveira, A.I.; Ferrada, F. A Collaborative Services Ecosystem for Ambient Assisted Living. In Collaborative Networks in the Internet of Services; Camarinha-Matos, L.M., Xu, L., Afsarmanesh, H., Eds.; Springer: Berlin/Heidelberg, Germany, 2012; Volume 380, pp. 117–127. [Google Scholar]
- Calvaresi, D.; Cesarini, D.; Sernani, P.; Marinoni, M.; Dragoni, A.F.; Sturm, A. Exploring the ambient assisted living domain: A systematic review. J. Ambient Intell. Hum. Comput. 2017, 8, 239–257. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Teles, S.; Bertel, D.; Kofler, A.C.; Ruscher, S.H.; Paúl, C. A Multi-perspective View on AAL Stakeholders’ Needs—A User-centred Requirement Analysis for the Activeadvice European Project. In Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies for Ageing Well and e-Health, Porto, Portugal, 28–29 April 2017; pp. 104–116. [Google Scholar]
- Awada, I.A.; Cramariuc, O.; Mocanu, I.; Seceleanu, C.; Kunnappilly, A.; Florea, A.M. An end- user perspective on the CAMI Ambient and Assisted Living Project. In Proceedings of the 12th annual International Technology, Education and Development Conference, Valencia, Spain, 5 March 2018. [Google Scholar]
- De Backere, F.; Bonte, P.; Verstichel, S.; Ongenae, F.; De Turck, F. The OCarePlatform: A context-aware system to support independent living. Comput. Meth. Prog. Biol. 2017, 140, 111–120. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Balasubramanian, V.; Stranieri, A.; Kaur, R. AppA: Assistive Patient Monitoring Cloud Platform for Active Healthcare Applications. In Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Ubiquitous Information Management and Communication, Bali, Indonesia, 8–10 January 2015; pp. 54:1–54:8. [Google Scholar]
- Berndt, R.; Takenga, M.C.; Kuehn, S.; Preik, P.; Sommer, G.; Berndt, S. SaaS-platform for mobile health applications. In Proceedings of the International Multi-Conference on Systems, Sygnals Devices, Chemnitz, Germany, 20–23 March 2012; pp. 1–4. [Google Scholar]
- Camarinha-Matos, L.M.; Afsarmanesh, H. A Multi Agent Based Infrastructure to Support Virtual Communities in Elderly Care. Int. J. Netw. Virtual Organ. 2004, 2, 246–266. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Chou, L.; Lai, N.; Chen, Y.; Chang, Y.; Yang, J.; Huang, L.; Chiang, W.; Chiu, H.; Shin, H. Mobile Social Network Services for Families With Children With Developmental Disabilities. IEEE Trans. Inf. Technol. Biomed. 2011, 15, 585–593. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Manikas, K.; Hansen, K.M. Software ecosystems—A systematic literature review. J. Syst. Softw. 2013, 86, 1294–1306. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Franco-Bedoya, O.; Ameller, D.; Costal, D.; Franch, X. Open source software ecosystems: A Systematic mapping. Inf. Softw. Technol. 2017, 91, 160–185. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Tansley, A.G. The Use and Abuse of Vegetational Concepts and Terms. Ecology 1935, 16, 284–307. Available online: https://esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.2307/1930070 (accessed on 9 February 2019). [CrossRef]
- Dhungana, D.; Groher, I.; Schludermann, E.; Biffl, S. Software Ecosystems vs. Natural Ecosystems: Learning from the Ingenious Mind of Nature. In Proceedings of the Fourth European Conference on Software Architecture, Copenhagen, Denmark, 23–26 August 2010; pp. 96–102. [Google Scholar]
- Messerschmitt, D.G.; Szyperski, C. Software Ecosystem: Understanding an Indispensable Technology and Industry; MIT Press: Cambridge, MA, USA, 2003. [Google Scholar]
- Jansen, S.; Finkelstein, A.; Brinkkemper, S. A sense of community: A research agenda for software ecosystems. In Proceedings of the 31st International Conference on Software Engineering—Companion Volume, Vancouver, BC, Canada, 16–24 May 2009; pp. 187–190. [Google Scholar]
- Lungu, M. Towards reverse engineering software ecosystems. In Proceedings of the IEEE International Conference on Software Maintenance, Beijing, China, 28 September–4 October 2008; pp. 428–431. [Google Scholar]
- Goeminne, M.; Mens, T. Analyzing ecosystems for open source software developer communities. In 01 Software Ecosystems Analyzing and Managing Business Networks in the Software Industry; Jansen, S., Cusumano, M.A., Brinkkemper, S., Eds.; Edward Elgar Publishing: Cheltenham, UK, 2013. [Google Scholar]
- Iyawa, G.E.; Herselman, M.; Botha, A. Digital Health Innovation Ecosystems: From Systematic Literature Review to Conceptual Framework. Procedia Comput. Sci. 2016, 100, 244–252. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Christensen, H.B.; Hansen, K.M.; Kyng, M.; Manikas, K. Analysis and design of software ecosystem architectures—Towards the 4S telemedicine ecosystem. Inf. Softw. Technol. 2014, 56, 1476–1492. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Frejlichowski, D.; Gościewska, K.; Forczmański, P.; Hofman, R. “SmartMonitor”— An Intelligent Security System for the Protection of Individuals and Small Properties with the Possibility of Home Automation. Sensors 2014, 14, 9922–9948. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Magana-Espinoza, P.; Aquino-Santos, R.; Cardenas-Benitez, N.; Aguilar-Velasco, J.; Buenrostro-Segura, C.; Edwards-Block, A.; Medina-Cass, A. WiSPH: A Wireless Sensor Network-Based Home Care Monitoring System. Sensors 2014, 14, 7096–7119. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Palumbo, F.; Ullberg, J.; Åtimec, A.; Furfari, F.; Karlsson, L.; Coradeschi, S. Sensor Network Infrastructure for a Home Care Monitoring System. Sensors 2014, 14, 3833–3860. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Chung, Y.F.; Liu, C.H. Design of a Wireless Sensor Network Platform for Tele-Homecare. Sensors 2013, 13, 17156–17175. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Sahoo, P.K.; Thakkar, H.K.; Lee, M.Y. A Cardiac Early Warning System with Multi Channel SCG and ECG Monitoring for Mobile Health. Sensors 2017, 17, 711. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Baek, Y.; Atiq, M.K.; Kim, H.S. Adaptive Preheating Duration Control for Low-Power Ambient Air Quality Sensor Networks. Sensors 2014, 14, 5536–5551. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Blasco, R.; Marco, A.; Casas, R.; Cirujano, D.; Picking, R. A Smart Kitchen for Ambient Assisted Living. Sensors 2014, 14, 1629–1653. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Castillejo, E.; Almeida, A.; López-de Ipiña, D.; Chen, L. Modeling Users, Context and Devices for Ambient Assisted Living Environments. Sensors 2014, 14, 5354–5391. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Queirós, A.; Silva, A.; Alvarelhão, J.; Rocha, N.P.; Teixeira, A. Usability, accessibility and ambient-assisted living: A systematic literature review. Univers. Access Inf. 2015, 14, 57–66. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Garcés, L.; Ampatzoglou, A.; Avgeriou, P.; Nakagawa, E.Y. Quality attributes and quality models for ambient assisted living software systems: A systematic mapping. Inf. Sofw. Technol. 2017, 82, 121–138. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Kitchenham, B.; Charters, S. Guidelines for performing Systematic Literature Reviews in Software Engineering. 2007. [Google Scholar]
- Petersen, K.; Vakkalanka, S.; Kuzniarz, L. Guidelines for conducting systematic mapping studies in software engineering: An update. Inf. Sofw. Technol. 2015, 64, 1–18. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Iyawa, G.E.; Herselman, M.; Botha, A. A scoping review of digital health innovation ecosystems in developed and developing countries. In Proceedings of the IST-Africa Week Conference (IST-Africa), Windhoek, Namibi, 30 May–2 June 2017. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Wu, Z.; Zhang, X.; Chen, Y.; Zhang, Y. Technological Ecosystems in Health Informatics: A Brief Review Article. Iran. J. Public Health 2016, 45, 1146–1148. [Google Scholar]
- de Lima Fontão, A.; dos Santos, R.P.; Dias-Neto, A.C. Mobile Software Ecosystem (MSECO): A Systematic Mapping Study. In Proceedings of the IEEE 39th Annual Computer Software and Applications Conference, Taichung, Taiwan, 1–5 July 2015; Volume 2, pp. 653–658. [Google Scholar]
- Scaringella, L.; Radziwon, A. Innovation, entrepreneurial, knowledge, and business ecosystems: Old wine in new bottles? Technol. Forecast. Soc. Chang. 2017, 136, 59–87. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Petticrew, M.; Roberts, H. Systematic reviews in the social sciences: A practical guide. Eur. Psychol. 2008, 11, 244–245. [Google Scholar]
- Mergel, G.D.; Silveira, M.S.; da Silva, T.S. A Method to Support Search String Building in Systematic Literature Reviews Through Visual Text Mining. In Proceedings of the 30th Annual ACM Symposium on Applied Computing, Salamanca, Spain, 13–17 April 2015; pp. 1594–1601. [Google Scholar]
- Marcos-Pablos, S.; García-Peñalvo, F.J. Information retrieval methodology for aiding scientific database search. Soft Comput. 2018. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Moher, D.; Liberati, A.; Tetzlaff, J.; Altman, D.G. Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses: The PRISMA Statement. Ann. Intern. Med. 2009, 151, 264–269. [Google Scholar]
- Knodel, J.; Manikas, K. Towards a Typification of Software Ecosystems. In Software Business; Fernandes, J.M., Machado, R.J., Wnuk, K., Eds.; Springer International Publishing: Cham, Switzerland, 2015; pp. 60–65. [Google Scholar]
- Pang, Z.; Zheng, L.; Tian, J.; Kao-Walter, S.; Dubrova, E.; Chen, Q. Design of a terminal solution for integration of in-home health care devices and services towards the Internet-of-Things. Enterp. Inf. Syst. 2015, 9, 86–116. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Costa, C.R.; Anido-Rifón, L.E.; Fernández-Iglesias, M.J. An Open Architecture to Support Social and Health Services in a Smart TV Environment. IEEE J. Biomed. Health Inf. 2017, 21, 549–560. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Farahani, B.; Firouzi, F.; Chang, V.; Badaroglu, M.; Constant, N.; Mankodiya, K. Towards fog-driven IoT eHealth: Promises and challenges of IoT in medicine and healthcare. Future Gener. Comput. Syst. 2018, 78, 659–676. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Qureshi, B. Towards a Digital Ecosystem for Predictive Healthcare Analytics. In Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Management of Emergent Digital EcoSystems, Buraidah, Al Qassim, Saudi Arabia, 15–17 September 2014; pp. 34–41. [Google Scholar]
- Litovuo, L.; Makkonen, H.; Aarikka-Stenroos, L.; Luhtala, L.; Makinen, S. Ecosystem approach on medical game development: The relevant actors, value propositions and innovation barrier. In Proceedings of the 21st International Academic Mindtrek Conference, Tampere, Finland, 20–21 September 2017; pp. 35–44. [Google Scholar]
- Christopoulou, S.; Kotsilieris, T.; Dimopoulou, N. A web tool for an Open and Linked Health Ecosystem. In Proceedings of the 2013 E-Health and Bioengineering Conference (EHB), Iasi, Romania, 21–23 November 2013; pp. 1–6. [Google Scholar]
- van’t Klooster, J.W.; Van Beijnum, B.J.; Pawar, P.; Sikkel, K.; Meertens, L.; Hermens, H. Virtual communities for elderly healthcare: User-based requirements elicitation. Int. J. Netw. Virtual Organ. 2011, 9, 214–232. [Google Scholar]
- Wolf, P.; Schmidt, A.; Klein, M. SOPRANO—An extensible, open AAL platform for elderly people based on semantical contracts. In Proceedings of the 18th European Conference on Artificial Intelligence (ECAI 08), Patras, Greece, 21–25 July 2008. [Google Scholar]
- Neiva, F.W.; David, J.M.N.; Braga, R.; Campos, F. Towards pragmatic interoperability to support collaboration: A systematic review and mapping of the literature. Inf. Sofw. Technol. 2016, 72, 137–150. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Eichelberg, M.; Büsching, F.; Steen, E.E.; Helmer, A.; Thiel, A.; Hein, A.; Wolf, L. A technical platform for environments for ageing—Lessons learned from three field studies. Inform. Health Soc. Care 2014, 39, 272–293. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Fabbricatore, C.; Zucker, M.; Ziganki, S.; Karduck, A.P. Towards an unified architecture for smart home and Ambient Assisted Living solutions: A focus on elderly people. In Proceedings of the 5th IEEE International Conference on Digital Ecosystems and Technologies (IEEE DEST 2011), Daejeon, Korea, 1 May–3 June 2011; pp. 305–311. [Google Scholar]
- Ferro, E.; Girolami, M.; Salvi, D.; Mayer, C.; Gorman, J.; Grguric, A.; Ram, R.; Sadat, R.; Giannoutakis, K.M.; Stocklöw, C. The UniversAAL Platform for AAL (Ambient Assisted Living). J. Intell. Syst. 2015, 78, 301–319. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Helal, S.; Chen, C.; Kim, E.; Bose, R.; Lee, C. Toward an Ecosystem for Developing and Programming Assistive Environments. Proc. IEEE 2012, 100, 2489–2504. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Marcelino, I.; Laza, R.; Domingues, P.; Gomez-Meire, S.; Fdez-Riverola, F.; Pereira, A. Active and Assisted Living Ecosystem for the Elderly. Sensors 2018, 18. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Ibarz, A.; Falcó, J.L.; Vaquerizo, E.; Lain, L.; Artigas, J.I.; Roy, A. MonAMI: Mainstream on Ambient Intelligence. Scaled Field Trial Experience in a Spanish Geriatric Residence. In Ambient Assisted Living and Home Care; Bravo, J., Hervás, R., Rodríguez, M., Eds.; Springer: Berlin/Heidelberg, Germany, 2012; pp. 119–126. [Google Scholar]
- Aanesen, H.A.K.; Borras, J. eHealth: The future service model for home and community health care. In Proceedings of the 7th IEEE International Conference on Digital Ecosystems and Technologies (DEST), Menlo Park, CA, USA, 24–26 July 2013; pp. 172–177. [Google Scholar]
- Kor, A.; Yanovsky, M.; Pattinson, C.; Kharchenko, V. SMART-ITEM: IoT-enabled smart living. In Proceedings of the 2016 Future Technologies Conference (FTC), San Francisco, CA, USA, 6–7 December 2016; pp. 739–749. [Google Scholar]
- Li, S.H.; Wang, C.Y.; Lu, W.H.; Lin, Y.Y.; Yen, D.C. Design and Implementation of a Telecare Information Platform. J. Med. Syst. 2012, 36, 1629–1650. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Li, Y.; Guo, L.; Guo, Y. Enabling Health Monitoring as a Service in the Cloud. In Proceedings of the IEEE/ACM 7th International Conference on Utility and Cloud Computing, London, UK, 8–11 December 2014; pp. 127–136. [Google Scholar]
- Lu, S.; Lai, K.; Yang, D.; Tsai, M.; Li, K.; Chung, Y. Pervasive health service system: Insights on the development of a grid-based personal health service system. In Proceedings of the 12th IEEE International Conference on e-Health Networking, Applications and Services, Lyon, France, 1–3 July 2010; pp. 61–67. [Google Scholar]
- Ma, J.; Yen, N.Y.; Huang, R.; Zhao, X. W2T Framework Based U-Pillbox System Towards U-Healthcare for the Elderly. In Wisdom Web of Things; Zhong, N., Ma, J., Liu, J., Huang, R., Tao, X., Eds.; Springer International Publishing: Cham, Switzerland, 2016; pp. 209–236. [Google Scholar]
- Macis, S.; Loi, D.; Pani, D.; Rijnen, W.; Raffo, L. A TV-based ICT Platform for Active Ageing, Tele-care and Social Networking. In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies for Ageing Well and e-Health, Lisbon, Portugal, 5 November 2015; pp. 219–227. [Google Scholar]
- Miori, V.; Russo, D. Improving life quality for the elderly through the Social Internet of Things (SIoT). In Proceedings of the 2017 Global Internet of Things Summit (GIoTS), Geneva, Switzerland, 6–9 June 2017; pp. 1–6. [Google Scholar]
- Lamprinakos, G.; Asanin, S.; Broden, T.; Prestileo, A.; Fursse, J.; Papadopoulos, K.; Kaklamani, D.; Venieris, I. An integrated remote monitoring platform towards Telehealth and Telecare services interoperability. Inf. Sci. 2015, 308, 23–37. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Oberleitner, R.; Reischl, U.; Lacy, T.; Goodwin, M.; Spitalnick, J.S. Emerging Use of Behavior Imaging for Autism and Beyond. In Future Visions on Biomedicine and Bioinformatics 1: A Liber Amicorum in Memory of Swamy Laxminarayan; Bos, L., Carroll, D., Kun, L., Marsh, A., Roa, L.M., Eds.; Springer: Berlin/Heidelberg, Germany, 2011; pp. 93–104. [Google Scholar]
- Pecoraro, F.; Luzi, D.; Pourabbas, E.; Ricci, F.L. A conceptual model for integrating social and health care services at home: The H@H project. In Proceedings of the 2016 IEEE 18th International Conference on e-Health Networking, Applications and Services (Healthcom), Munich, Germany, 14–16 September 2016; pp. 1–6. [Google Scholar]
- Ram, R.; Peres, Y. Online shop for integrated software, hardware, and human services. IBM J. Res. Dev. 2014, 58, 17:1–17:10. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Rosas, J.a.; Camarinha-Matos, L.M.; Carvalho, G.; Oliveira, A.I.; Ferrada, F. Development of an Ecosystem for Ambient Assisted Living. In Innovative and Creative Developments in Multimodal Interaction Systems; Rybarczyk, Y., Cardoso, T., Rosas, J.a., Camarinha-Matos, L.M., Eds.; Springer: Berlin/Heidelberg, Germany, 2014; pp. 200–227. [Google Scholar]
- Stav, E.; Walderhaug, S.; Mikalsen, M.; Hanke, S.; Benc, I. Development and evaluation of SOA-based AAL services in real-life environments: A case study and lessons learned. Int. J. Med. Inform. 2013, 82, e269–e293. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Stefan, I.; Aldea, C.L.; Nechifor, C.S. Web platform architecture for ambient assisted living. J. Ambient Intell. Smart Environ. 2018, 10, 35–47. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Tazari, M.R.; Furfari, F.; Ramos, J.P.L.; Ferro, E. The PERSONA Service Platform for AAL Spaces. In Handbook of Ambient Intelligence and Smart Environments; Nakashima, H., Aghajan, H., Augusto, J.C., Eds.; Springer US: Boston, MA, USA, 2010; pp. 1171–1199. [Google Scholar]
- Camarinha-Matos, L.M.; Ferrada, F.; Oliveira, A.I.; Rosas, J.; Monteiro, J.N. Integrated care services in ambient assisted living. In Proceedings of the 2013 IEEE 15th International Conference on e-Health Networking, Applications and Services (Healthcom 2013), Lisbon, Portugal, 9–12 October 2013; pp. 197–201. [Google Scholar]
- Li, Y.; Guo, L.; Wu, C.; Lee, C.; Guo, Y. Building a cloud-based platform for personal health sensor data management. In Proceedings of the IEEE-EMBS International Conference on Biomedical and Health Informatics (BHI), Valencia, Spain, 1–4 June 2014; pp. 223–226. [Google Scholar]
- Health Level Seven INTERNATIONAL. Available online: http://www.hl7.org/ (accessed on 30 September 2018).
- XDS.b Implementation. Available online: https://wiki.ihe.net/index.php/XDS.b_Implementation (accessed on 30 September 2018).
- ISO/IEEE 11073-10418:2014: Health Informatics. Personal Health Device Communication. Available online: https://www.iso.org/standard/61897.html (accessed on 30 September 2018).
- ISO 13940:2015: Health Informatics. System of Concepts to Support Continuity of Care. Available online: https://www.iso.org/standard/58102.html (accessed on 30 September 2018).
- What Is HIPAA. Available online: https://www.dhcs.ca.gov/formsandpubs/laws/hipaa/Pages/1.00WhatisHIPAA.aspx (accessed on 30 September 2018).
- IEC Strategic Group 5. Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) Standardization Work in IEC TCs. Available online: https://www.iec.ch/dyn/www/f?p=103:85:0::::FSP_ORG_ID,FSP_LANG_ID:8761,25 (accessed on 30 September 2018).
- IEC TR 62907:2014. Use Cases Related to Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) in the Field of Audio, Video and Multimedia Systems and Equipment. Available online: https://webstore.iec.ch/publication/7474 (accessed on 30 September 2018).
- Lewis, R.B.; Lewis, R.B. Assistive Technology and Learning Disabilities: Today’s Realities and Tomorrow’s Promises. J. Learn. Disabil. 1998, 31, 16–26. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Cedillo, P.; Sanchez, C.; Campos, K.; Bermeo, A. A Systematic Literature Review on Devices and Systems for Ambient Assisted Living: Solutions and Trends from Different User Perspectives. In Proceedings of the 2018 International Conference on eDemocracy eGovernment (ICEDEG), Ambato, Ecuador, 4–6 April 2018; pp. 59–66. [Google Scholar]
- Camarinha-Matos, L.M.; Rosas, J.; Oliveira, A.I.; Ferrada, F. Care services ecosystem for ambient assisted living. Enterp. Inf. Syst. 2015, 9, 607–633. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Rashidi, P.; Mihailidis, A. A Survey on Ambient-Assisted Living Tools for Older Adults. IEEE J. Biomed. Health Inf. 2013, 17, 579–590. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Duarte, P.A.S.; Barreto, F.M.; Aguilar, P.A.C.; Boudy, J.; Andrade, R.M.C.; Viana, W. AAL Platforms Challenges in IoT Era: A Tertiary Study. In Proceedings of the 13th Annual Conference on System of Systems Engineering (SoSE), Paris, France, 19–22 June 2018; pp. 106–113. [Google Scholar]
- Galvagno, M.; Dalli, D. Theory of value co-creation: A systematic literature review. Manag. Serv. Qual. Int. J. 2014, 24, 643–683. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Akaka, M.A.; Vargo, S.L.; Lusch, R.F. The Complexity of Context: A Service Ecosystems Approach for International Marketing. J. Int. Mark. 2013, 21, 1–20. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Tronvoll, B. The Actor: The Key Determinator in Service Ecosystems. Systems 2017, 5, 38. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- van Gemert-Pijnen, J.E.; Nijland, N.; van Limburg, M.; Ossebaard, H.C.; Kelders, S.M.; Eysenbach, G.; Seydel, E.R. A Holistic Framework to Improve the Uptake and Impact of eHealth Technologies. J. Med. Internet Res. 2011, 13, e111. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Frow, P.; McColl-Kennedy, J.R.; Hilton, T.; Davidson, A.; Payne, A.; Brozovic, D. Value propositions: A service ecosystems perspective. Mark. Theor. 2014, 14, 327–351. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Truong, Y.; Simmons, G.; Palmer, M. Reciprocal value propositions in practice: Constraints in digital markets. Ind. Mark. Manag. 2012, 41, 197–206. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- García-Holgado, A.; García-Peñalvo, F.J. The Evolution of the Technological Ecosystems: An Architectural Proposal to Enhancing Learning Processes. In Proceedings of the First International Conference on Technological Ecosystem for Enhancing Multiculturality, Salamanca, Spain, 14–15 November 2013; pp. 565–571. [Google Scholar]
- García-Holgado, A.; García-Peñalvo, F.J. Architectural pattern for the definition of eLearning ecosystems based on Open Source developments. In Proceedings of the International Symposium on Computers in Education (SIIE), Logrono, Spain, 12–14 November 2014; pp. 93–98. [Google Scholar]
- Pinkse, J.; Bohnsack, R.; Kolk, A. The Role of Public and Private Protection in Disruptive Innovation: The Automotive Industry and the Emergence of Low-Emission Vehicles. J. Prod. Innov. Manag. 2013, 31, 43–60. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Jansen, S.; Brinkkemper, S.; Cusumano, M.A.; Jansen, S.; Brinkkemper, S.; Cusumano, M.A. Software Ecosystems: Analyzing and Managing Business Networks in the Software Industry; Edward Elgar Publishing: Cheltenham, UK, 2014. [Google Scholar]
- UniversAAL IoT Open Platform. Available online: http://www.universaal.info/page/explore/ (accessed on 30 September 2018).
- OpenAAl Middleware Open Platform. Available online: http://openaal.org/ (accessed on 30 September 2018).
- OpenTele Platform. Available online: http://4s-online.dk/wiki/doku.php?id=opentele:overview (accessed on 30 September 2018).
- Wagner, S.; Hansen, F.O.; Pedersen, C.F.; Memon, M.; Aysha, F.H.; Mathissen, M.; Nielsen, C.; Wesby, O.L. Carestore platform for seamless deployment of ambient assisted living applications and devices. In Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Pervasive Computing Technologies for Healthcare and Workshops, Venice, Italy, 5–8 May 2013; pp. 240–243. [Google Scholar]
- Kartsakli, E.; Lalos, A.S.; Antonopoulos, A.; Tennina, S.; Renzo, M.D.; Alonso, L.; Verikoukis, C. A Survey on M2M Systems for mHealth: A Wireless Communications Perspective. Sensors 2014, 14, 18009–18052. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Allet, L.; Knols, R.H.; Shirato, K.; Bruin, E.D.D. Wearable Systems for Monitoring Mobility-Related Activities in Chronic Disease: A Systematic Review. Sensors 2010, 10, 9026–9052. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Khalid, Z.; Fisal, N.; Rozaini, M. A survey of middleware for sensor and network virtualization. Sensors 2014, 14, 24046–24097. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Li, X.; Eckert, M.; Martinez, J.F.; Rubio, G. Context Aware Middleware Architectures: Survey and Challenges. Sensors 2015, 15, 20570–20607. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Alshinina, R.; Elleithy, K. Performance and Challenges of Service-Oriented Architecture for Wireless Sensor Networks. Sensors 2017, 17, 536. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- OSGi Alliance. Available online: https://www.osgi.org/ (accessed on 8 October 2018).
- Linberg, K.R. Software developer perceptions about software project failure: A case study. J. Syst. Softw. 1999, 49, 177–192. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Stefanov, D.H.; Bien, Z.; Bang, W.C. The smart house for older persons and persons with physical disabilities: Structure, technology arrangements, and perspectives. IEEE Trans. Neural Syst. Rehabil. Eng. 2004, 12, 228–250. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Jaeger, P.T. Assessing Section 508 compliance on federal e-government Web sites: A multi-method, user-centered evaluation of accessibility for persons with disabilities. Gov. Inf. Q. 2006, 23, 169–190. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Hernández-Encuentra, E.; Pousada, M.; Gómez-Zúñiga, B. ICT and Older People: Beyond Usability. Educ. Gerontol. 2009, 35, 226–245. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gao, S.; Vegendla, A.; Duc, A.N.; Sindre, G. A Systematic Mapping Study on Requirements Engineering in Software Ecosystems. J. Inf. Technol. Res. 2018, 11, 49–69. [Google Scholar]
- Jansen, S. How Quality Attributes of Software Platform Architectures Influence Software Ecosystems. In Proceedings of the 2013 International Workshop on Ecosystem Architectures, Saint Petersburg, Russia, 19 August 2013; pp. 6–10. [Google Scholar]
- García-Holgado, A.; Marcos-Pablos, S.; García-Peñalvo, F.J. A model to define an eHealth technological ecosystem for caregivers. In Proceedings of the WorldCist’19—7th World Conference on Information Systems and Technologies, Galicia, Spain, 16–19 April 2019. in press. [Google Scholar]
- García-Holgado, A.; Marcos-Pablos, S.; Therón-Sánchez, R.; García-Peñalvo, F.J. Technological ecosystems in the health sector: A mapping study of European research projects. J. Med. Syst. 2019, in press. [Google Scholar]
Search String | Number of Results Obtained |
---|---|
ecosystem AND older person | 7 |
ecosystem AND elderly | 258 |
ecosystem AND (elderly OR care) | 3997 |
(“digital ecosystem” OR “software ecosystem” OR “technological ecosystem”) AND (elderly OR care) | 5 |
Abstract 1 | Effective provision of care and assistance services in ambient assisted living requires the involvement and collaboration of multiple stakeholders. To support such collaboration, the development of an ecosystem of products and services for active aging plays an important role. This article introduces a conceptual architecture that supports such care ecosystem. In order to facilitate understanding and better interrelate concepts, a 3-layered model is adopted … |
Abstract 2 | Assistance technologies are directly linked to the elderly and the disabled people. The necessary services offered by an assistance technologies ecosystem are provided mostly through internet. It is also well known that elderly and disabled people find it difficult to access the internet. The resulting challenge is to discover a combination of assistance technologies, meaning devices and software interface characteristics in order to give the opportunity to elderly and disabled to access the internet and enhance their autonomy to the extent made possible by electronic services. To address this, we elaborate on the concept of ecosystems to propose the notion … |
Abstract 3 | Patient-centric healthcare and evidence-based medicine with the emphasis on prevention and wellness promise to deliver better and more affordable healthcare. At minimal, they require health related information to be shared among a community including patients, providers, payers, and regulators. It is important for IT systems to facilitate information sharing within such … In particular, the concept of shared infrastructure and services provides the foundation for supporting healthcare service ecosystems. This paper proposes an ecosystem approach to identify … |
Question | Score |
---|---|
Does the proposed solution apply to the whole technological ecosystem? (or describes it partially i.e., the software, business, etc. structure?) | Yes/Partially/No |
Is the ecosystem architecture clearly described and defined? | Yes/Partially/No |
Are the main goals of the ecosystem reported? | Yes/Partially/No |
Are the ecosystem actors clearly identified and their roles specified? | Yes/Partially/No |
Does the paper state which technologies are employed and how they are integrated into the ecosystem? | Yes/Partially/No |
Are the services provided within the ecosystem adequately described? | Yes/Partially/No |
Is the ecosystem implemented in the real world? (I.e., What is the maturity of the proposed solution? Is it a proof of concept, a piloted prototype architecture or a real implemented solution.) | Yes/Partially/No |
Does the paper outline the methods used to evaluate the performance of the ecosystem as well as the results of that evaluation? | Yes/Partially/No |
Are all research questions answered adequately? | Yes/Partially/No |
Step | Papers Retrieved | Percentage of Papers Left |
---|---|---|
Execution of the query string in the databases | 23,797 (11,850 Scopus), (11,947 WoS) | 100% |
Remove duplicate studies and apply the cosine similarity threshold | 809 | 3.4% |
Apply the rest of inclusion criteria reviewing titles and abstracts, and full text when necessary | 194 | 0.8% |
Apply quality criteria based on article’s full text | 35 | 0.15% |
Remove instances of the same work (3 papers removed) | 32 | 0.13% |
Review papers primary references (5 papers added) | 37 | 0.16% |
Paper | Year | Definition |
---|---|---|
[10] | 2004 | “New technological developments, although not solving all problems, can be part of a new concept of integrated care system. An integrated elderly care system consists of a number of organisations such as care centres/day centres, healthcare institutions, and social security institutions, that involve the cooperation of a number of different human actors, e.g., social care assistants, healthcare professionals, elderly people, and their relatives. If based on computer networks and adequate supporting tools, the collaboration among the care institutions may evolve towards operating as a long-term virtual organisation and the various actors involved become part of a virtual community (VC).” |
[49] | 2011 | “According to the definition, virtual communities can be used to support many processes in the elderly care sector. For example, they support the social interaction between clients and (informal) caregivers. ICT-based synchronous and asynchronous communication may expand client and (in)formal caregiver communication methods. VCs allow for the exchange of public and private information between involved parties and services. Profile- or context-based matchmaking allows for suggestions to find friends, activities and services. Reminder and agenda services can be moderated by and tailored to community members to increase and to organise socialisation. A VC can give personalised medication reminders and compliance rates when connected to medication registration. When mobility is integrated as in our case, ambulant telemonitoring services can be integrated for physiological signal monitoring and for feedback purposes.” |
[48] | 2013 | “However, there is not a single concrete definition that encompasses all the characteristics of a health ecosystem. A definition encompassing the approaches of several research and commercial efforts (e.g., …) states that: A health ecosystem is defined as an environment where personal and public health related data are collected and distributed. Health care professionals are able to communicate with each other, apply appropriate treatment and avoid medical errors. Also, patients are continuously connected or online forming virtual communities.” |
[21] | 2014 | “the interaction of a set of actors on top of a common technological platform that results in a number of software solutions or services … Further, Each actor is motivated by a set of interests or business models and connected to the rest of the actors and the ecosystem as a whole with symbiotic relationships, while, the technological platform is structured in a way that allows the involvement and contribution of the different actors.” |
[46] | 2014 | “A Medical Eco-system essentially enriches medical practice with innovative technologies and systems but ensure interoperability, coordination, collaboration and synergy between physicians, patients and organizations since they comprise an integrated ecosystem.” |
[43] | 2015 | “… the Health-IoT is a business over shared infrastructures including the internet backend facilities, core networks, access networks and mobile terminals… the health care service providers … should make use of the existing infrastructures owned by the internet content providers. Then the contents of Health-IoT services are delivered through the channels of telecom operators. On the other hand, the internet content providers and telecom operators should get the health care content from health care service providers instead of create it by themselves. The health care financial sources should encourage and protect such cooperation by financing the content providers in some way. The privacy regulations and public authentications should be applied to the content providers and telecom providers, as strictly as they are applied to the health care service providers.” |
[44] | 2017 | “The concept of ecosystem of applications is proposed to refer to the technological infrastructure to support a collection of related services and, in the case of social and health care, to offer the communication and interaction mechanisms required to guarantee integrated care.” |
[47] | 2017 | “draws from service-dominant logic (SDL) and underlines systemic value creation within a network of actors [23]. It emphasizes the contribution of all actors, … including patients and their families and friends, other patients, health care professionals, hospitals, health support agencies, professional associations, health insurers, health care authorities, government agencies, and regulatory bodies … SDL draws from the idea of togetherness; actors in the ecosystem use their knowledge and skills to provide benefits or value reciprocally to others and themselves” |
[45] | 2018 | “In order to truly integrate hospitals or clinics with patients in PCC, there is a need to utilize the powerful ecosystem of IoT … IoT ecosystem is a convergence of sensors, actuators, telecommunication, cloud computing and big data, interconnecting them through the Inter net to provide goal-oriented services”. Where PCC is Patient Centred Care which is defined as: “Healthcare that establishes a partnership among practitioners, patients, and their families (when appropriate) to ensure that decisions respect patients’ wants, needs, and preferences and that patients have the education and support they need to make decisions and participate in their own care.” |
Paper | Source |
---|---|
[6] | International Technology, Education and Development Conference |
[7] | Computer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine |
[8] | Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Ubiquitous Information Management and Communication |
[9] | International Multi-Conference on Systems, Signals and Devices |
[10] | International Journal of Networking and Virtual Organisations |
[11] | IEEE Transactions on Information Technology in Biomedicine |
[21] | Inf. Sofw. Technol. |
[48] | International Conference on Smart Homes and Health Telematics |
[44] | Journal of Biomedical and Health Informatics |
[52] | Informatics for Health and Social Care |
[53] | IEEE International Conference on Digital Ecosystems and Technologies |
[45] | Future Generation Computer Systems |
[54] | Journal of intelligent systems |
[55] | Proceedings of the IEEE |
[56] | Sensors |
[57] | Journal of Research and Practice in Information Technology |
[58] | IEEE International Conference on Digital Ecosystems and Technologies |
[59] | Proceedings of the 2016 Future Technologies Conference |
[60] | Journal of Medical Systems |
[61] | IEEE/ACM International Conference on Utility and Cloud Computing |
[47] | Proceedings of the 21st International Academic Mindtrek Conference |
[62] | IEEE International Conference on e-Health Networking, Application and Services |
[63] | Wisdom Web of Things |
[64] | International Conference on Information and Communication Technologies for Ageing Well and eHealth |
[65] | Global Internet of Things Summit |
[66] | Information Sciences |
[67] | Future Visions on Biomedicine and Bioinformatics |
[43] | Enterprise Information Systems |
[68] | IEEE 18th International Conference on e-Health Networking, Applications and Services |
[46] | International Conference on Management of Emergent Digital EcoSystems |
[69] | IBM Journal of Research and Development |
[70] | Innovative and Creative Developments in Multimodal Interaction Systems |
[71] | International Journal of Medical Informatics |
[72] | Journal of Ambient Intelligence and Smart Environments |
[73] | Handbook of Ambient Intelligence and Smart Environments |
[49] | International Journal of Networking and Virtual Organisations |
[50] | European conference on artificial intelligence |
Name | Total |
---|---|
Camarinha-Matos, LM | 2 |
Awada, Imad Alex; Cramariuc, Oana; Mocanu, Irina; Seceleanu, Cristina; Kunnappilly, Ashalatha; Florea, Adina Magda; de Backere, F; Bonte, P; Verstichel, S; Ongenae, E; de Turck, F; Balasubramanian, V; Stranieri, A; Kaur, R; Berndt R.-D., Takenga M.C., Kuehn S., Preik P., Sommer G., Berndt S.; Camarinha-Matos, LM; Afsarmanesh, H; Chou, LD; Lai, NH; Chen, YW; Chang, YJ; Yang, JY; Huang, LF; Chiang, WL; Chiu, HY; Shin, HY; Christensen, HB; Hansen, KM; Kyng, M; Manikas, K; Christopoulou, S; Kotsilieris, T; Dimopoulou, N;Costa, CR; Anido-Rifon, LE; Fernandez-Iglesias, MJ; Eichelberg, M; Busching, F; Steen, EE; Helmer, A; Thiel, A; Hein, A; Wolf, L;Fabbricatore, C; Zucker, M; Ziganki, S; Karduck, AP; Farahani, B; Firouzi, F; Chang, V; Badaroglu, M; Constant, N; Mankodiya, K;Ferro, E.; Girolami, M.; Salvi, D.; Mayer, C.; Gorman, J.; Grguric, A.; Ram, R.; Sadat, R.; Giannoutakis, K.M.; Stocklöw, C.; Helal, S.; Chen, C.; Kim, E.; Bose, R.; Lee, C.; Marcelino, I; Laza, R; Domingues, P; Gomez-Meire, S; Fdez-Riverola, F; Pereira, A; Ibarz, A; Falco, JL; Vaquerizo, E; Lain, L; Artigas, JI; Roy, A; Kielland-Aanesen, HA; Borras, J; Kor, AL; Yanovsky, M; Pattinson, C; Kharchenko, V; Li, SH; Wang, CY; Lu, WH; Lin, YY; Yen, DC; Li, Y; Guo, L; Guo, Y; Litovuo, L; Makkonen, H; Aarikka-Stenroos, L; Luhtala, L; Makinen, S; Lu, SH; Lai, KC; Yang, DL; Tsai, MH; Li, KC; Chung, YC; Ma, JH; Yen, NY; Huang, RH; Zhao, X; Macis, S.; Loi, D.; Pani, D.; Rijnen, W.; Raffo, L.; Miori, V; Russo, D; Lamprinakos, G.C.; Asanin, S.; Broden, T.; Prestileo, A.; Fursse, J.; Papadopoulos, K.A.; Kaklamani, D.I.; Venieris, I.S.; Oberleitner, R; Reischl, U; Lacy, T; Goodwin, M; Spitalnick, JS; Pang, ZB; Zheng, LR; Tian, JZ; Kao-Walter, S; Dubrova, E; Chen, Q; Pecoraro, F; Luzi, D; Pourabbas, E; Ricci, FL; Qureshi, B; Ram, R; Peres, Y;Rosas, J; Camarinha-Matos, LM; Carvalho, G; Oliveira, AI; Ferrada, F; Stav, E; Walderhaug, S; Mikalsen, M; Hanke, S; Benc, I; Stefan, I; Aldea, CL; Nechifor, CS; Tazari, MR; Furfari, F; Ramos, JPL; Ferro, E; Van’t Klooster, JW; Van Beijnum, BJ; Pawar, P; Sikkel, K; Meertens, L; Hermens, H; Wolf, P; Schmidt, A; Klein, M; | 1 |
Type of Service | Examples in the Papers |
---|---|
health or care | indicate caregiver location and select which caregiver is more suited to execute a task [7,11]; remote physiological transmission and management [52,53]; health records transmission and management [44,60]; etc. |
environmental monitoring | generate alerts from house parameters [56,66,68]; health-related environmental monitoring [7,59]; fall prevention [6,52]; etc. |
reminder and information | medication reminders [49,63,71]; schedule personal doctor appointments [64,65]; agenda reminders [10,57]; etc. |
social interaction | social networks [44,64]; share experiences with doctors and caregivers [43,46,59,63]; leisure services [10,56] etc. |
rehabilitation and maintenance | rehabilitation monitoring [44,52,62]; serious games [44,47,57]; etc. |
Paper | End Users’ Questionnaire Evaluation | Evaluate Running System Performance | Simulation | Evaluate Ecosystem Components |
---|---|---|---|---|
[11,56,67], [44,66,69], [71] | x | |||
[8,45,60], [43,52,58], [57] | x | |||
[62,70] | x | |||
[7,61] | x | |||
[72] | x | x | ||
[6] | x | x |
Paper | HL7 | XDS | ISO/IEEE 11073 | ISO 13940 | HIPAA | Contribute in the Creation of Standards | Propose Their Own Standard |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
[9,45,56,60,62] | x | ||||||
[21] | x | x | |||||
[54] | x | ||||||
[58] | x | ||||||
[66] | x | x | |||||
[67] | x | ||||||
[68] | x | ||||||
[46,71] | x | x |
Paper | Health Education | Technology Usage | Software Development | Systems Integration | Training Action |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
[11] | x | Care volunteers are trained by care professionals | |||
[21] | x | x | x | Guides, tutorials, and code support that allows non-expert users to produce valid clinical data. Online information resources for software development. Provide testing environment of new functionalities | |
[48] | x | x | Documentation to support editing, addition of new or removal of existing technological devices. | ||
[44] | x | x | Demonstration of system usage in piloted environments. Content providing continuing education to caregivers. | ||
[54] | x | x | x | Documentation for developers for adding new services. Training material for training new technical users. It includes documents, presentations, videos, and material for courses. | |
[58] | x | x | x | On-line documentation for software development and technology usage and standard compliance. | |
[60] | x | Remote health education training through courses on a Learning platform: Audio/video courses, Course inquiry, Learning platform, Course satisfaction survey … | |||
[67] | x | Clinical training for doctors from an annotated video database of children with autism spectrum disorders. | |||
[68] | x | Social community patient education for increased awareness of the problems so as to instill autonomy in the patient to take care of their own illness. | |||
[71] | x | In home training activities on technology usage to the senior users. |
Paper | Care and Assistance | Technology | Ecosystem |
---|---|---|---|
[10] | “computer networks and adequate supporting tools” | “involve the cooperation of a number of different human actors, e.g., social care assistants, healthcare professionals, elderly people, and their relatives” | |
[49] | “apply appropriate treatment and avoid medical errors” | “personal and public health related data are collected and distributed” | “Health care professionals … communicate with each other … Also, patients are continuously connected or on-line forming virtual communities” |
[21] | “common technological platform … allows the involvement and contribution of the different actors” | “interaction of a set of actors … with symbiotic relationships” | |
[46] | “enriches medical practice” | “innovative technologies and systems” | “interoperability, coordination, collaboration and synergy between physicians, patients and organizations” |
[43] | “the health care service providers … should make use of the existing infrastructures” | “shared infrastructures including the internet backend facilities, core networks, access networks and mobile terminals” | “should make use of the existing infrastructures owned by the internet content providers” |
[44] | “social and health care” | “technological infrastructure” | “to offer the communication and interaction mechanisms required to guarantee integrated care” |
[47] | “systemic value creation within a network of actors including patients and their families and friends, other patients, health care professionals, hospitals … actors in the ecosystem use their knowledge and skills to provide benefits or value reciprocally to others and themselves” | ||
[45] | “Patient Centred Care … patients have the education and support they need to make decisions and participate in their own care” | “convergence of sensors, actuators, telecommunication, cloud computing and big data” | “integrate hospitals or clinics with patients … establishes a partnership among practitioners, patients, and their families” |
© 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Marcos-Pablos, S.; García-Peñalvo, F.J. Technological Ecosystems in Care and Assistance: A Systematic Literature Review. Sensors 2019, 19, 708. https://doi.org/10.3390/s19030708
Marcos-Pablos S, García-Peñalvo FJ. Technological Ecosystems in Care and Assistance: A Systematic Literature Review. Sensors. 2019; 19(3):708. https://doi.org/10.3390/s19030708
Chicago/Turabian StyleMarcos-Pablos, Samuel, and Francisco José García-Peñalvo. 2019. "Technological Ecosystems in Care and Assistance: A Systematic Literature Review" Sensors 19, no. 3: 708. https://doi.org/10.3390/s19030708