Information technology is changing healthcare systems in revolutionary ways;
there can be no health care reform without an information revolution. One
information technology that is transforming healthcare systems is mobile
technology. As it develops and matures, mobile technology is having a
significant impact on healthcare, and emerging mobile technologies are
attracting significant attention as well as investment of time and effort among
researchers and industrial developers. The combination of mobile technology
with healthcare has produced an important research area called mHealth. In
2011, U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services, Kathleen Sebelius,
referred to mHealth as “the biggest technology breakthrough of our time” and
maintained that its use would “address our greatest national challenge.”
Based on related research, mobile health is projected to be a 26 billion dollar
industry by 2017.
Mobile technology has wide-ranging applications in human healthcare,
such as monitoring elderly patients, security access control for electronic
health records, and remote radiology. The primary drivers behind these
applications are varied, as evidenced by the following facts:
• Current mobile computing devices already offer many advanced
features, such as high-quality cameras, web searching, sound recording,
and global positioning systems (GPS).
• The capabilities of mobile computing devices (mobile tablet devices and
smartphones) are growing.
• The implementation of mobile imaging platform/systems is growing.
Currently, thousands of apps are available, including apps for disease
diagnosis, diet and disease tracking, medication and exercise planning,
and blood pressure monitoring.
• A growing number of physicians are recognizing the advantages of
using mobile tools.
• The mobile technologies in current use are already providing new
opportunities by boosting communication between different healthcare providers and between healthcare providers and patients, and by allowing access to medical images from virtually any location.
In fact, a 2012 study by Manhattan Research discovered that approximately
62% of U.S. doctors utilize some type of tablet device in their practice, nearly
doubling the adoption rate since 2011.
According to industry evaluations, 500 million smartphone users
worldwide will be using a healthcare application by 2018, and 50% of the
more than 3.4 billion smartphone and tablet users will have downloaded
mobile health applications. Moreover, the Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) “recognizes the extensive variety of actual and potential functions of
mobile apps, the rapid pace of innovation in mobile apps, and the potential
benefits and risks to public health represented by these apps.” Finally, mobile
computing devices have become commonplace in healthcare settings, leading
to rapid growth in the development of biomedical software applications for
these platforms.
The aim of this book is to publish state-of-the-art research in electronic
imaging technologies as applied to mobile healthcare, and to promote
research in mHealth. The twelve chapters in this book are organized into four
parts:
Part I deals with image processing and enhanced visualization. Chapter 1
introduces image processing techniques for mobile healthcare systems.
Chapter 2 presents image enhancement technology for low-vision patients
who use mobile devices to see images. Chapter 3 describes the application of
fast Fourier transform-based methods for color medical imaging in mobile
devices. Chapter 4 presents new quaternion-based image enhancement tools
that can be used as a preprocessing step in conventional cell phone imaging
systems by improving the interpretability of information in images for phone
viewers. Chapter 5 develops an adapted retinex algorithm for medical image
enhancement using mobile phones.
Part II deals with security issues in mobile healthcare applications.
Chapter 6 examines security issues for mobile devices using cloud services and
presents a homomorphic encryption method that enables direct operation
over the encoded data and hence facilitates complete privacy protection.
Chapter 7 proposes a novel and fast encryption of images and their decryption
without loss of information for medical image viewing on a cell phone.
Part III covers human external pulsometers and activity recognition using
mobile devices. Chapter 8 addresses human activity recognition and
processing in mobile environments. Chapter 9 develops mobile applications
to measure a person’s heart rate using a mobile phone camera.
Part IV includes three chapters on mobile healthcare applications.
Chapter 10 deals with skin cancer monitoring with an iPhone using image
retrieval techniques. Chapter 11 presents a user interface for mobile healthcare. Finally, Chapter 12 presents an automatic multiview food classification method for a food intake assessment system on a smartphone.
We hope that this book will inspire further research in mHealth.
Jinshan Tang
Sos S. Agaian
Jindong Tan
January 2016