Medhere: A Smartwatch-based Medication Adherence Monitoring System using Machine Learning and Distributed Computing

Author(s):  
Jinxin Ma ◽  
Anaelia Ovalle ◽  
Diane Myung-kyung Woodbridge
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 11801-11805

In the present occasions, because of urbanization and contamination, it has gotten important to screen and assess the nature of water arriving at our homes. Guaranteeing safe inventory of drinking water has become a major test for the cutting edge progress. In this desk work, we present a structure and improvement of a minimal effort framework for continuous checking of the water quality (WQ) in IoT (web of things). The framework comprise of a few sensors are accustomed to guesstimatingsomatic and element limitations of the water. The parameters like temperature, PH, turbidity, conductivity, broke up oxygen of the water can be estimated. The deliberate qualities from the sensors can be prepared by the center controller. The RBPI B+ (RBPI) model can be consumed as a center controller. At last, the instrument facts can be understood on web utilizing distributed computing. Here the information's are handled utilizing AI calculation it sense the water condition if the WQis great it open the entryway divider else it shuts the door divider. This whole procedure happens naturally without human mediation therefore spare an opportunity to contract with the circumstance physically. The uniqueness of our proposed research is to get the water observing framework with high recurrence, high portability, and low controlled.


Author(s):  
Athanasios Anastasiou ◽  
Kostas Giokas ◽  
Georgia Koutsouri ◽  
Dimitra Iliopoulou

This chapter presents the architecture and implementation of an automatic medication dispenser specifically for users who take medications without close professional supervision. By relieving the users from the error-prone tasks of interpreting medication directions and administrating medications accordingly, the device can improve the required level in compliance and prevent serious medication errors. By taking advantage of the scheduling flexibility provided by medication directions, the device makes the user's medication schedule easy to adhere and tolerant to tardiness whenever possible. This work is done collaboratively by the medication scheduler and dispenser controller in an action-oriented manner. An advantage of the action-oriented interface between the components is extensibility, as new functions can be added and existing ones removed with little or no need to modify the dispenser control structure. This chapter first describes the action-oriented design, major components and hardware structures of the smart device. It then provides an overview of the heuristic algorithms used by the medication scheduler and their relative merits. The different available user options will be presented depicting the user-specific operating modes of the device/service. The scope of this chapter is to describe the development of a smart electronic drug dispenser unit for the pharmaceutical adherence of patients.


2012 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. 13-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Athanasios Anastasiou ◽  
Kostas Giokas ◽  
Georgia Koutsouri ◽  
Dimitra Iliopoulou

This paper presents the architecture and implementation of an automatic medication dispenser (iMedPlus) specifically for users who take medications without close professional supervision. By relieving the users from the error-prone tasks of interpreting medication directions and administrating medications accordingly, the device can improve rigor in compliance and prevent serious medication errors. By taking advantage of scheduling flexibility provided by medication directions, the device makes the user’s medication schedule easy to adhere and tolerant to tardiness whenever possible. This work is done collaboratively by the medication scheduler and dispenser controller in an action-oriented manner. An advantage of the action-oriented interface between the components is extensibility, as new functions can be added and existing ones removed with little or no need to modify the dispenser control structure. The paper first describes the action-oriented design, major components, and hardware structures of the smart device. It then provides an overview of the heuristic algorithms used by the medication scheduler and their relative merits. The different available user options are presented depicting the user-specific operating modes of the device/service. The scope of this paper is to describe the development of a smart electronic drug dispenser unit for the pharmaceutical adherence of patients.


Author(s):  
Athanasios Anastasiou ◽  
Kostas Giokas ◽  
Georgia Koutsouri ◽  
Dimitra Iliopoulou

This chapter presents the architecture and implementation of an automatic medication dispenser specifically for users who take medications without close professional supervision. By relieving the users from the error-prone tasks of interpreting medication directions and administrating medications accordingly, the device can improve the required level in compliance and prevent serious medication errors. By taking advantage of the scheduling flexibility provided by medication directions, the device makes the user's medication schedule easy to adhere and tolerant to tardiness whenever possible. This work is done collaboratively by the medication scheduler and dispenser controller in an action-oriented manner. An advantage of the action-oriented interface between the components is extensibility, as new functions can be added and existing ones removed with little or no need to modify the dispenser control structure. This chapter first describes the action-oriented design, major components and hardware structures of the smart device. It then provides an overview of the heuristic algorithms used by the medication scheduler and their relative merits. The different available user options will be presented depicting the user-specific operating modes of the device/service. The scope of this chapter is to describe the development of a smart electronic drug dispenser unit for the pharmaceutical adherence of patients.


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