A framework for rapid integration of presentation components
Proceedings of the 16th international conference on World Wide Web
Time to rethink health care and ICT?
Communications of the ACM - Smart business networks
Journal of Management Information Systems
Guest Editorial: Semantic mashup of biomedical data
Journal of Biomedical Informatics
Proceedings of the 10th ACM workshop on Web information and data management
Market Overview of Enterprise Mashup Tools
ICSOC '08 Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Service-Oriented Computing
Mashup Patterns: Designs and Examples for the Modern Enterprise
Mashup Patterns: Designs and Examples for the Modern Enterprise
A new security scheme for e-health system
CTS '09 Proceedings of the 2009 International Symposium on Collaborative Technologies and Systems
Business process management: a survey
BPM'03 Proceedings of the 2003 international conference on Business process management
Mixup: a development and runtime environment for integration at the presentation layer
ICWE'07 Proceedings of the 7th international conference on Web engineering
Towards health 2.0: mashups to the rescue
NGITS'09 Proceedings of the 7th international conference on Next generation information technologies and systems
Design science in information systems research
MIS Quarterly
eHealth system interoperability
Information Systems Frontiers
Hi-index | 0.00 |
Healthcare delivery is evolving from disease-centered to patient-centered care delivery where patients are active participants in their healthcare delivery. This calls for more communication and collaboration among all healthcare actors. There is also an increasing demand for personalized healthcare systems that provide effective information management, facilitate communication and collaboration, and support applications to meet user requirements. To address these challenges, we need to advance the integration and interoperability of healthcare applications in a controlled manner. Drawing upon a conceptual model from a collaborative care case study, we identified a set of interoperability requirements and developed a Mashup based interoperability framework. Our framework allows patients and other healthcare actors to engage in collaborative processes through online applications facilitated by mashups. We then use proof-of-concept implementations to demonstrate how our framework is able to facilitate different types of interoperability. We believe that collaborative technologies such as mashups can implement process interoperability requirements to support collaborative care delivery, particularly for asynchronous care delivery.