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The digital revolution in health / edited by J�er�ome B�eranger, Roland Rizouli�eres.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextSeries: Innovation, entrepreneurship, management series. Health and innovation set ; ; v. 2.Publication details: London : ISTE, Ltd. ; Hoboken : Wiley, 2021.Description: 1 online resource (193 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781119842453
  • 111984245X
  • 9781119842446
  • 1119842441
  • 9781119842460
  • 1119842468
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Print version:: Digital revolution in health.DDC classification:
  • 610.28 23
LOC classification:
  • R855.3
Online resources:
Contents:
Intro -- Table of Contents -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Foreword: Advocacy for a European Reference Framework for Digital Ethics -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- I.1. The health system and digital technology: challenges, issues, and transformations (Part 1) -- I.2. The digital and transformations in the relations between professionals and patients (Part 2) -- I.3. Supporting digital health (Part 3) -- PART 1: The Health System and Digital Technology: Challenges, Issues, and Transformations -- Introduction to Part 1
1 Digital Integration and Healthcare Pathways in the Territories -- 1.1. Introduction -- 1.2. What lessons can be learned from integrated American and Swiss models? -- 1.3. Digital technology as a challenge for territorial integration in the context of healthcare in France -- 1.4. Digital integration and aging in France: from health pathway to life pathway -- 1.5. Conclusion -- 1.6. References -- 2 Digital Technology in a Cancer Patient's Primary-Secondary Care Journey -- 2.1. Introduction -- 2.2. Organization of cancer care -- 2.3. Regional health organization for patient management
2.4. Theoretical pathway of a cancer patient -- 2.5. Cancer announcement -- 2.6. Management of treatment-related adverse events -- 2.7. Patient follow-up -- 2.8. Ethics to support the primary to secondary care journey -- 2.9. Conclusion -- 2.10. References -- 3 A Smart Health Record for Better Coordination: A Sociological Analysis of the Organizational Dynamics of the Calipso Project -- 3.1. Solving health problems through better coordination -- 3.2. Historicity of the Calipso project -- 3.3. Collaboration as an object of study and theoretical framework
3.4. Identifying specific coordination problems to propose a general technological solution -- 3.5. Methodological course of the tailor-made experimental device -- 3.6. (Preliminary) results and conclusions -- 3.7. References -- PART 2: Digital Technology and Transformations in the Relationships between Professionals and Patients -- Introduction to Part 2 -- 4 Use of AI Systems in the Care Relationship, Redefining Patient and Physician Roles -- 4.1. Progressive affirmation of individualized healthcare in the service of patient autonomy
4.2. Integration of digital and ethical concepts in the training of health personnel and in the education of citizens -- 4.3. References -- 5 Artificial Intelligence Ethics in Medicine -- 5.1. Artificial intelligence in question -- 5.2. The doctor-patient relationship -- 5.3. Digital medicine ecosystem -- 5.4. Medicine 4.0 -- 5.5. Question of ethics -- 5.6. What lessons can be learned? -- 5.7. Real benefits of artificial intelligence -- 5.8. References -- 6 Digital and Public Health in West Africa -- 6.1. Introduction -- 6.2. Context and questions
Summary: What sort of health system do we want to implement in the face of the imminent arrival of artificial intelligence and robotics in medical practices? The Covid-19 health crisis has demonstrated the importance of digital technologies in the care of patients and their families, as imperative attention was called to ethics and relational practice. This book analyzes numerous sources of feedback to reveal the multiple facets of this so-called Medicine 4.0. It reveals the extent to which digital medicine requires new forms of organization and new approaches to co-conception, in a logic that is resolutely collaborative with patients. The book concludes with legal and ethical points of view in order to challenge the reader on their duty to truly be an "actor" of their health care.
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Print version record.

Intro -- Table of Contents -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Foreword: Advocacy for a European Reference Framework for Digital Ethics -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- I.1. The health system and digital technology: challenges, issues, and transformations (Part 1) -- I.2. The digital and transformations in the relations between professionals and patients (Part 2) -- I.3. Supporting digital health (Part 3) -- PART 1: The Health System and Digital Technology: Challenges, Issues, and Transformations -- Introduction to Part 1

1 Digital Integration and Healthcare Pathways in the Territories -- 1.1. Introduction -- 1.2. What lessons can be learned from integrated American and Swiss models? -- 1.3. Digital technology as a challenge for territorial integration in the context of healthcare in France -- 1.4. Digital integration and aging in France: from health pathway to life pathway -- 1.5. Conclusion -- 1.6. References -- 2 Digital Technology in a Cancer Patient's Primary-Secondary Care Journey -- 2.1. Introduction -- 2.2. Organization of cancer care -- 2.3. Regional health organization for patient management

2.4. Theoretical pathway of a cancer patient -- 2.5. Cancer announcement -- 2.6. Management of treatment-related adverse events -- 2.7. Patient follow-up -- 2.8. Ethics to support the primary to secondary care journey -- 2.9. Conclusion -- 2.10. References -- 3 A Smart Health Record for Better Coordination: A Sociological Analysis of the Organizational Dynamics of the Calipso Project -- 3.1. Solving health problems through better coordination -- 3.2. Historicity of the Calipso project -- 3.3. Collaboration as an object of study and theoretical framework

3.4. Identifying specific coordination problems to propose a general technological solution -- 3.5. Methodological course of the tailor-made experimental device -- 3.6. (Preliminary) results and conclusions -- 3.7. References -- PART 2: Digital Technology and Transformations in the Relationships between Professionals and Patients -- Introduction to Part 2 -- 4 Use of AI Systems in the Care Relationship, Redefining Patient and Physician Roles -- 4.1. Progressive affirmation of individualized healthcare in the service of patient autonomy

4.2. Integration of digital and ethical concepts in the training of health personnel and in the education of citizens -- 4.3. References -- 5 Artificial Intelligence Ethics in Medicine -- 5.1. Artificial intelligence in question -- 5.2. The doctor-patient relationship -- 5.3. Digital medicine ecosystem -- 5.4. Medicine 4.0 -- 5.5. Question of ethics -- 5.6. What lessons can be learned? -- 5.7. Real benefits of artificial intelligence -- 5.8. References -- 6 Digital and Public Health in West Africa -- 6.1. Introduction -- 6.2. Context and questions

6.3. Theoretical framework of analysis and associated concepts.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

What sort of health system do we want to implement in the face of the imminent arrival of artificial intelligence and robotics in medical practices? The Covid-19 health crisis has demonstrated the importance of digital technologies in the care of patients and their families, as imperative attention was called to ethics and relational practice. This book analyzes numerous sources of feedback to reveal the multiple facets of this so-called Medicine 4.0. It reveals the extent to which digital medicine requires new forms of organization and new approaches to co-conception, in a logic that is resolutely collaborative with patients. The book concludes with legal and ethical points of view in order to challenge the reader on their duty to truly be an "actor" of their health care.

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