scholarly journals MODELING AND MANAGING MEDICAL DATA

2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 (3) ◽  
pp. 21-27
Author(s):  
Emilia Geger ◽  
Irina Kozlova

The article describes a statistical method for analyzing medical data based on the comparison of binary samples. Processing data that is accumulated in transactional medical information systems, based on the analysis of binary samples, allows you to determine the indicators of laboratory research and diagnoses that are characteristic of harmful production factors. This will contribute to the development of digital technologies in healthcare, which will improve both diagnostics and treatment methods, as well as facilitate the adoption of competent management decisions. The research results were converted to binary form by comparing them with the statistical norm interval. Diagnoses were considered initially as a binary variable. The samples obtained as a result of binarization for two groups, the first group includes people whose production activities contain harmful factors, and the second – those who do not have these factors, were compared with each other. The initial group turned out to be heterogeneous in relation to the other group, so it was decided to conduct a further study based on the development and testing of methods for adjusting samples in order to achieve uniformity while maximizing the preservation of medical data used for analysis.

2014 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-14
Author(s):  
G. Georgieva-Tsaneva ◽  
M. Dimitrova

Abstract A method for determination of the Hurst exponent based on Analysis of Variance for processing of medical data sequences is proposed in the paper. It is compared to the “rescaled adjusted range method” developed by Hurst and applied in this paper to heart rate variability data. The obtained results and the performed comparative analysis demonstrate the possibility for effective application of the proposed method in novel medical information systems.


Author(s):  
D. G. Lagerev ◽  
E. A. Makarova

The paper considers the problem of integration, processing and mining of poorly structured data of medical information systems in order to make managerial decisions in healthcare. The problems of medical data are described, such as the lack of a sufficient structure, a large number of abbreviations characteristic of specific nosologies, the complexity of the automatic semantic interpretation of some fields. The authors demonstrated an approach to the search and disclosure of abbreviation in texts, based on a combination of machine and human processing. The method proposed by the authors, based on a hybrid approach combining the strengths of machine and human processing, made it possible to increase the number of abbreviations found by automatic methods by 21 %, and also opened up to 55 % of cases in the automated mode (with a probability of correctness above 70 %) and significantly reduce the time spent by specialists in processing the remaining reductions. Further research will be aimed at solving the following problems associated with the processing and specificity of medical data, such as a large number of spelling errors, specific grammatical constructions. Using a hybrid approach to preprocessing poorly structured data will increase the efficiency of management decisions in the field of healthcare by reducing the time spent by experts on their creation and support. The hybrid approach to the preprocessing of text data in Russian can be applied in other subject areas. However, it may be necessary to adjust the technique to the specifics of the processed data.


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (18) ◽  
pp. 6253
Author(s):  
Tuan Anh Nguyen ◽  
Iure Fe ◽  
Carlos Brito ◽  
Vishnu Kumar Kaliappan ◽  
Eunmi Choi ◽  
...  

The aggressive waves of ongoing world-wide virus pandemics urge us to conduct further studies on the performability of local computing infrastructures at hospitals/medical centers to provide a high level of assurance and trustworthiness of medical services and treatment to patients, and to help diminish the burden and chaos of medical management and operations. Previous studies contributed tremendous progress on the dependability quantification of existing computing paradigms (e.g., cloud, grid computing) at remote data centers, while a few works investigated the performance of provided medical services under the constraints of operational availability of devices and systems at local medical centers. Therefore, it is critical to rapidly develop appropriate models to quantify the operational metrics of medical services provided and sustained by medical information systems (MIS) even before practical implementation. In this paper, we propose a comprehensive performability SRN model of an edge/fog based MIS for the performability quantification of medical data transaction and services in local hospitals or medical centers. The model elaborates different failure modes of fog nodes and their VMs under the implementation of fail-over mechanisms. Sophisticated behaviors and dependencies between the performance and availability of data transactions are elaborated in a comprehensive manner when adopting three main load-balancing techniques including: (i) probability-based, (ii) random-based and (iii) shortest queue-based approaches for medical data distribution from edge to fog layers along with/without fail-over mechanisms in the cases of component failures at two levels of fog nodes and fog virtual machines (VMs). Different performability metrics of interest are analyzed including (i) recover token rate, (ii) mean response time, (iii) drop probability, (iv) throughput, (v) queue utilization of network devices and fog nodes to assimilate the impact of load-balancing techniques and fail-over mechanisms. Discrete-event simulation results highlight the effectiveness of the combination of these for enhancing the performability of medical services provided by an MIS. Particularly, performability metrics of medical service continuity and quality are improved with fail-over mechanisms in the MIS while load balancing techniques help to enhance system performance metrics. The implementation of both load balancing techniques along with fail-over mechanisms provide better performability metrics compared to the separate cases. The harmony of the integrated strategies eventually provides the trustworthiness of medical services at a high level of performability. This study can help improve the design of MIS systems integrated with different load-balancing techniques and fail-over mechanisms to maintain continuous performance under the availability constraints of medical services with heavy computing workloads in local hospitals/medical centers, to combat with new waves of virus pandemics.


Author(s):  
О.П. Мінцер ◽  
С. В. Денисенко ◽  
Л. Ю. Бабінцева

<p>The questions of extracting useful and new knowledge of the constantly accumulating data in medical information systems are considered. Approaches to the discovery of new knowledge in the storage of medical data are analyzed. There is emphasized the idea of ​​the need to minimize human intervention and production data analysis as possible automatically. In the first report it is described in more detail the data clustering methods.</p>


1970 ◽  
Vol 09 (03) ◽  
pp. 149-160 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Van Brunt ◽  
L. S. Davis ◽  
J. F. Terdiman ◽  
S. Singer ◽  
E. Besag ◽  
...  

A pilot medical information system is being implemented and currently is providing services for limited categories of patient data. In one year, physicians’ diagnoses for 500,000 office visits, 300,000 drug prescriptions for outpatients, one million clinical laboratory tests, and 60,000 multiphasic screening examinations are being stored in and retrieved from integrated, direct access, patient computer medical records.This medical information system is a part of a long-term research and development program. Its major objective is the development of a multifacility computer-based system which will support eventually the medical data requirements of a population of one million persons and one thousand physicians. The strategy employed provides for modular development. The central system, the computer-stored medical records which are therein maintained, and a satellite pilot medical data system in one medical facility are described.


1983 ◽  
Vol 22 (03) ◽  
pp. 124-130 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. H. Bemmel

At first sight, the many applications of computers in medicine—from payroll and registration systems to computerized tomography, intensive care and diagnostics—do make a rather chaotic impression. The purpose of this article is to propose a scheme or working model for putting medical information systems in order. The model comprises six »levels of complexity«, running parallel to dependence on human interaction. Several examples are treated to illustrate the scheme. The reason why certain computer applications are more frequently used than others is analyzed. It has to be strongly considered that the differences in complexity and dependence on human involvement are not accidental but fundamental. This has consequences for research and education which are also discussed.


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