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Mateus, D., Martins, A. & Correia, R. (2024). Chain of Portable Health Folders: A Systematic Literature Review. 8th EAI International Conference on Intelligent Transport Systems (INTSYS 2024)).
D. Mateus et al., "Chain of Portable Health Folders: A Systematic Literature Review", in 8th EAI Int. Conf. on Intelligent Transport Systems (INTSYS 2024)), Pisa, 2024
@misc{mateus2024_1765610908048,
author = "Mateus, D. and Martins, A. and Correia, R. ",
title = "Chain of Portable Health Folders: A Systematic Literature Review",
year = "2024",
howpublished = "Other",
url = "https://futuretransport.eai-conferences.org/2024/"
}
TY - CPAPER TI - Chain of Portable Health Folders: A Systematic Literature Review T2 - 8th EAI International Conference on Intelligent Transport Systems (INTSYS 2024)) AU - Mateus, D. AU - Martins, A. AU - Correia, R. PY - 2024 CY - Pisa UR - https://futuretransport.eai-conferences.org/2024/ AB - Abstract: The rise of Information Technologies’ influence during the 3rd industrial revolution led to the development of Digital Health Records, with Electronic Health Records (EHRs) and Personal Health Records (PHRs) be-ginning patient empowerment [1]. Today, Health Wallets (HWs), leveraging technologies like Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR) and Blockchain [2], represent the next step in this evolution, focusing on pa-tient-centric health management, and the growing needs of availability, transparency, and privacy and reliability. The paper, henceforth, will conduct a Systematic Literature Review, following the PRISMA framework [3], with the aim at exploring the characteristics of existing patient information plat-forms, advantages and limitations of their use, and gaps in the current solu-tions. An initial search yielded 850 articles, of which 36 were included in the analysis. The results show that healthcare professionals generally support the integration of HWs into practice [4], with accelerated research and imple-mentation following the Covid-19 pandemic. These platforms aim for secure data management, although challenges persist, particularly in terms of in-teroperability, and data protection [5]. Benefits include Patient empower-ment, better treatment, and cost reduction as well as operational efficiency. Despite some resistance due to established routines and patient eHealth liter-acy, key issues are mitigated by key technologies such as FHIR [6], Block-chain, Role Based Access Control (RBAC), and Bidirectional Communica-tion. Research should focus on the ability of Health Wallets to inte-grate seamlessly with existing systems to avoid additional complexity, en-hance privacy, enhance user experience, and improve healthcare efficiency. ER -
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