Volume I. Section 1. Cloud-based healthcare. Chapter 1. Service level agreements for smart healthcare in cloud ; Chapter 2. Cloud computing as the useful resource for application of the medical information system for quality assurance purposes ; Chapter 3. Cloud based wireless infrastructure for health monitoring ; Chapter 4. Secure health monitoring in the cloud using homomorphic encryption: a branching-program formulation ; Chapter 5. Towards privacy-preserving medical cloud computing using homomorphic encryption
Section 2. Data mining, big data, and analytics. Chapter 6. A method for classification using data mining technique for diabetes: a study of health care information system ; Chapter 7. Application of complex event processing techniques to big data related to healthcare: a systematic literature review of case studies ; Chapter 8. Concoction of ambient intelligence and big data for better patient ministration services ; Chapter 9. Towards clinical and operational efficiency through healthcare process analytics
Section 3. Electronic health records and information exchange. Chapter 10. Hierarchy similarity analyser: an approach to securely share electronic health records ; Chapter 11. Biometric secured electronic health record ; Chapter 12. EEMI an electronic health record for pediatricians: adoption barriers, services and use in Mexico ; Chapter 13. Critical success factors in electronic health records (EHR) implementation: an exploratory study in North India ; Chapter 14. An architectural solution for health information exchange ; Chapter 15. Barriers to successful health information exchange systems in Canada and the USA: a systematic review ; Chapter 16. Inter-organizational knowledge sharing system in the health sector: physicians' perspective
Section 4. Health information technology. Chapter 17. The process of strategic, agile, innovation development: a healthcare systems implementation case study ; Chapter 18. Towards the development of smart spaces-based socio-cyber-medicine systems ; Chapter 19. Physician engagement with health information technology: implications for practice and professionalism ; Chapter 20. Adoption of ICT in implementing primary health care: achievements of the twenty-first century ; Chapter 21. General practitioners' adoption and use of ICT ; Chapter 22. ICTS, e-health, and multidisciplinary healthcare teams: promises and challenges ; Chapter 23. Steps towards interoperability in healthcare environment ; Chapter 24. Semantic interoperability-enabled architecture for connected health services
Volume II. ; Chapter 25. Medical case based reasoning frameworks: current developments and future directions ; Chapter 26. Methodologies of legacy clinical decision support system: a review ; Chapter 27. A multiplatform decision support tool in neonatology and pediatric care
Section 5. Health monitoring systems. Chapter 28. A trusted ubiquitous healthcare monitoring system for hospital environment ; Chapter 29. Recent advances in minimally-obtrusive monitoring of people's health ; Chapter 30. Designing smart home environments for unobtrusive monitoring for independent living: the use case of USEFIL ; Chapter 31. Design and development of real time patient monitoring system with GSM technology ; Chapter 32. Design of WSN in real time application of health monitoring system ; Chapter 33. New features for damage detection and their temperature stability ; Chapter 34. Nonlinear ultrasonics for early damage detection ; Chapter 35. Butterworth filter application for structural health monitoring ; Chapter 36. Parallel and distributed population based feature selection framework for health monitoring ; Chapter 37. A low cost pupillometry approach
Section 6. Internet of Things. Chapter 38. Thing theory: connecting humans to smart healthcare ; Chapter 39. Reliability of IoT-aware BPMN healthcare processes
Section 7. Mhealth and ehealth. Chapter 40. A taxonomy for mhealth ; Chapter 41. M-health in prehospital emergency medicine: experiences from the EU funded project livecity ; Chapter 42. Mobile healthcare in an increasingly connected developing world ; Chapter 43. Factors influencing physicians' acceptance of e-health in developing country: an empirical study ; Chapter 44. Ehealth service modeling for developing country: a case of emergency medical service for elderly in Asia
Section 8. Telehealth. Chapter 45. Working anywhere for telehealth ; Chapter 46. The influence of national factors on transferring and adopting telemedicine technology: perspectives of chief information officers ; Chapter 47. A proxy-based solution for asynchronous telemedical systems ; Chapter 48. M-health telemedicine and telepresence in oral and maxillofacial surgery: an innovative prehospital healthcare concept in structurally weak areas ; Chapter 49. Mobile telemedicine systems for remote patient's chronic wound monitoring ; Chapter 50. Medco: an emergency tele-medicine system for ambulance
Section 9. Virtual health training. Chapter 51. Who am i as a healthcare provider?: identity and transformative learning in virtual environments ; Chapter 52. Using simulation to teach security and encryption to non-technical healthcare professionals.