| Literature DB >> 21133766 |
Reinhold Haux1, Andreas Hein, Marco Eichelberg, Jens-E Appell, Hans-Jürgen Appelrath, Christian Bartsch, Thomas Bisitz, Jörg Bitzer, Matthias Blau, Susanne Boll, Michael Buschermöhle, Felix Büsching, Birte Erdmann, Uwe Fachinger, Juliane Felber, Tobias Fleuren, Matthias Gietzelt, Stefan Goetze, Mehmet Gövercin, Axel Helmer, Wilko Heuten, Volker Hohmann, Rainer Huber, Manfred Hülsken-Giesler, Gerold Jacobs, Riana Kayser, Arno Kerling, Timo Klingeberg, Yvonne Költzsch, Harald Künemund, Jennifer Kunze, Wolfram Ludwig, Michael Marschollek, Birger Martens, Markus Meis, Eike Michael Meyer, Jochen Meyer, Wolfgang Nebel, Franz J Neyer, Petra-Karin Okken, Hartmut Remmers, Lars Rölker-Denker, Thomas Rohdenburg, Meinhard Schilling, Gisela C Schulze, Bianying Song, Jens Spehr, Elisabeth Steinhagen-Thiessen, Uwe Tegtbur, Wilfried Thoben, Peter Van Hengel, Stefan Wabnik, Friedrich Wahl, Sandra Wegel, Olaf Wilken, Simon Winkelbach, Thorben Wist, Manfred Wittrock, Klaus-Hendrik Wolf, Lars Wolf, Melanie Zokoll-Van Derlaan.
Abstract
Worldwide, ageing societies are bringing challenges for independent living and healthcare. Health-enabling technologies for pervasive healthcare and sensor-enhanced health information systems offer new opportunities for care. In order to identify, implement and assess such new information and communication technologies (ICT) the 'Lower Saxony Research Network Design of Environments for Ageing' (GAL) has been launched in 2008 as interdisciplinary research project. In this publication, we inform about the goals and structure of GAL, including first outcomes, as well as to discuss the potentials and possible barriers of such highly interdisciplinary research projects in the field of health-enabling technologies for pervasive healthcare. Although GAL's high interdisciplinarity at the beginning slowed down the speed of research progress, we can now work on problems, which can hardly be solved by one or few disciplines alone. Interdisciplinary research projects on ICT in ageing societies are needed and recommended.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21133766 DOI: 10.3109/17538157.2010.520419
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Inform Health Soc Care ISSN: 1753-8157 Impact factor: 2.439