Requirements engineering in health care: the example of chemotherapy planning in paediatric oncology
Requirements Engineering
Upiquitous Home Healthcare Management System with Early Warning Reporting
ICCIT '07 Proceedings of the 2007 International Conference on Convergence Information Technology
MAHI: investigation of social scaffolding for reflective thinking in diabetes management
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Mobile phones assisting with health self-care: a diabetes case study
Proceedings of the 10th international conference on Human computer interaction with mobile devices and services
Software engineering for health education and care delivery systems: The Smart Condo project
SEHC '09 Proceedings of the 2009 ICSE Workshop on Software Engineering in Health Care
SEHC '09 Proceedings of the 2009 ICSE Workshop on Software Engineering in Health Care
Query-based requirements engineering for health care information systems: Examples and prospects
SEHC '09 Proceedings of the 2009 ICSE Workshop on Software Engineering in Health Care
Adaptation issues in software architectures of remote health care systems
Proceedings of the 2010 ICSE Workshop on Software Engineering in Health Care
A typology to support HIS design for collaborative healthcare delivery
Proceedings of the 2010 ICSE Workshop on Software Engineering in Health Care
Reflective assistance for eldercare environments
Proceedings of the 2010 ICSE Workshop on Software Engineering in Health Care
Take it personally: accounting for individual difference in designing diabetes management systems
Proceedings of the 8th ACM Conference on Designing Interactive Systems
A multiagent system enhancing home-care health services for chronic disease management
IEEE Transactions on Information Technology in Biomedicine
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The implications of an aging U.S. population indicate that a large portion of the population will receive limited access to the healthcare they need, unless clinical preventive services are provided. Patient-centered healthcare, in which patients gain more access to and control over their own health, is becoming an important part of clinical preventive services and so is software. Healthcare entails highly complex processes that require substantial communication between different healthcare professionals. A major concern for patient-centered software is that it must adapt to changing needs to support long-term wellbeing, i.e., new knowledge must be considered continuously as part of the software lifecycle. This position paper contends that research efforts should be directed toward software engineering solutions that consider evolution as a part of the software lifecycle and use a variety of feedback channels to direct evolution, and presents a research agenda integrated with an approach that addresses evolving needs through a continuous data-driven requirements engineering (RE) technique.