Magic Medicine Cabinet: A Situated Portal for Consumer Healthcare
HUC '99 Proceedings of the 1st international symposium on Handheld and Ubiquitous Computing
XIMSA: eXtended Interactive Multimedia System for Auto-medication
CBMS '04 Proceedings of the 17th IEEE Symposium on Computer-Based Medical Systems
A prototype on RFID and sensor networks for elder healthcare: progress report
Proceedings of the 2005 ACM SIGCOMM workshop on Experimental approaches to wireless network design and analysis
LuxTrace: indoor positioning using building illumination
Personal and Ubiquitous Computing
Restful web services
Enabling Smart Spaces with OSGi
IEEE Pervasive Computing
The integration of home-automation and IPTV system and services
Computer Standards & Interfaces
RSFDGrC '07 Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Rough Sets, Fuzzy Sets, Data Mining and Granular Computing
A hybrid public key infrastructure solution (HPKI) for HIPAA privacy/security regulations
Computer Standards & Interfaces
A Jini-Based Solution for Electronic Prescriptions
IEEE Transactions on Information Technology in Biomedicine
AVATAR: an improved solution for personalized TV based on semantic inference
IEEE Transactions on Consumer Electronics
Senior patients online: which functions should a good patient website offer?
UAHCI'13 Proceedings of the 7th international conference on Universal Access in Human-Computer Interaction: user and context diversity - Volume 2
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Recent reports by major health institutions have shown that up to one half of patients do not take their medications as prescribed, which undermines treatment outcomes and increases the costs of healthcare. The implantation of Electronic Health Records (EHR) is seen as a key step in all the strategies envisaged to address this problem, and there are several major initiatives to standardize such artifacts. In this paper, we present a system that aims to promote medication adherence in contexts of daily life, interacting with standards-based EHR repositories from both domestic and mobile devices. This approach represents an advance with regard to previous works on smart medicine managers, which could only record information in local logs and required the users to enter their prescriptions and medications regimens manually. Experiments with real users confirm the added value of applications with automatic access to EHR and interfaces for various types of devices.