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Published in: Journal of Medical Systems 5/2011

01-10-2011 | Editorial

Body Area Network for Ubiquitous Healthcare Applications: Theory and Implementation

Authors: Sana Ullah, Kyung Sup Kwak

Published in: Journal of Medical Systems | Issue 5/2011

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Excerpt

With recent advances in wireless communication, low-power miniaturized sensors and semiconductor technologies, the sensor networks have become the integral part of ubiquitous healthcare systems. These networks can be used to provide remote health monitoring for a long period of time with real-time feedback to the hospital. For example, a set of intelligent and low-power sensors can be seamlessly integrated in/on a human body to create an autonomous sensor network called Body Area Network (BAN). The BAN can be used to stream biological information from the human body and transmit it over a long distance to a remote server for diagnostic recommendations. Some applications include diagnoses and treatment of many diseases including myocardial infarction, gastrointestinal tract, cancer detection, asthma, diabetes, and other health problems. Compared to traditional sensor networks, BANs face additional research challenges including signal propagation in/around a human body, power scavenging issues, fault tolerance, mobility, reliable Medium Access Control (MAC) protocols, Quality of Service (QoS), biocompatibility and security. …
Metadata
Title
Body Area Network for Ubiquitous Healthcare Applications: Theory and Implementation
Authors
Sana Ullah
Kyung Sup Kwak
Publication date
01-10-2011
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Medical Systems / Issue 5/2011
Print ISSN: 0148-5598
Electronic ISSN: 1573-689X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10916-011-9787-x

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