Patient Advocate: Cooperative Agents to Support Patient-Centered Needs and Demands

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Citation: Silvia Miksch and Kenneth Cheng and Barbara Hayes-Roth. (1996) Patient Advocate: Cooperative Agents to Support Patient-Centered Needs and Demands. In Knowledge Systems, AI Laboratory, March,1996.

Publication inproceedings ( Edit )
type InProceedings
bibtype inproceedings
Bibtex basics
author Silvia Miksch and Kenneth Cheng and Barbara Hayes-Roth
title Patient Advocate: Cooperative Agents to Support Patient-Centered Needs and Demands
booktitle Knowledge Systems, AI Laboratory
year 1996
month March
Bibtex more
note Submitted to 1996 AMIA Annual Fall Symposium, October 26-30, 1996, Washington, DC.
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abstract Knowledge-based monitoring and therapy planning systems were mainly built for the convenience of health care providers. They neglect the consumers of health care, namely, the patients. Our approach is concentrated on the individual patient's demands and needs. We are designing, building, and demonstrating cooperative agents to support patients' management of their own health-related behavior on a day-to-day basis at home. Clinical treatment protocols are represented in an intention-based temporal representation language to overcome the drawbacks of vague or ill-structured problem definitions (e.g., missing functional dependencies).These representations are used to guide the patient, to provide necessary explanations, and to observe and critique whether the patient obeys the instructions of the health-care provider. We will present a prototype which monitors and consults with women with gestational diabetes mellitus.

KSL Technical Report ID: KSL-96-14
Facts about Patient Advocate: Cooperative Agents to Support Patient-Centered Needs and DemandsRDF feed
Abstract Knowledge-based monitoring and therapy pla Knowledge-based monitoring and therapy planning systems were mainly built for the convenience of health care providers. They neglect the consumers of health care, namely, the patients. Our approach is concentrated on the individual patient's demands and needs. We are designing, building, and demonstrating cooperative agents to support patients' management of their own health-related behavior on a day-to-day basis at home. Clinical treatment protocols are represented in an intention-based temporal representation language to overcome the drawbacks of vague or ill-structured problem definitions (e.g., missing functional dependencies).These representations are used to guide the patient, to provide necessary explanations, and to observe and critique whether the patient obeys the instructions of the health-care provider. We will present a prototype which monitors and consults with women with gestational diabetes mellitus. women with gestational diabetes mellitus.
Author Silvia Miksch and Kenneth Cheng and Barbara Hayes-Roth  +
Bibtype inproceedings  +
Booktitle Knowledge Systems, AI Laboratory  +
Has author Silvia Miksch and Kenneth Cheng and Barbara Hayes-Roth  +
Has identifier KSL-96-14  +
Has publishing details March,1996  +
Has title Patient Advocate: Cooperative Agents to Support Patient-Centered Needs and Demands  +
Has where published Knowledge Systems, AI Laboratory  +
Has year 1996  +
Ksl tr id KSL-96-14  +
Month March  +
Note Submitted to 1996 AMIA Annual Fall Symposium, October 26-30, 1996, Washington, DC.
Process note NO  +
Title Patient Advocate: Cooperative Agents to Support Patient-Centered Needs and Demands  +
Year 1996  +
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