Home monitoring in asthma: towards digital twins
David Drummond, Jolt Roukema, Mariëlle W. Pijnenburg
- Year
- 2023
- Citations
- 24
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: We highlight the recent advances in home monitoring of patients with asthma, and show that these advances converge towards the implementation of digital twin systems. RECENT FINDINGS: Connected devices for asthma are increasingly numerous, reliable and effective: new electronic monitoring devices extend to nebulizers and spacers, are able to assess the quality of the inhalation technique, and to identify asthma attack triggers when they include a geolocation function; environmental data can be acquired from databases and refined by wearable air quality sensors; smartwatches are better validated. Connected devices are increasingly integrated into global monitoring systems. At the same time, machine learning techniques open up the possibility of using the large amount of data collected to obtain a holistic assessment of asthma patients, and social robots and virtual assistants can help patients in the daily management of their asthma. SUMMARY: Advances in the internet of things, machine learning techniques and digital patient support tools for asthma are paving the way for a new era of research on digital twins in asthma.
Keywords
Related papers
Robots and Jobs: Evidence from US Labor Markets
Daron Acemoğlu, Pascual Restrepo
2019
The Uncanny Valley [From the Field]
Masahiro Mori, Karl F. MacDorman, Norri Kageki
2012
Measurement Instruments for the Anthropomorphism, Animacy, Likeability, Perceived Intelligence, and Perceived Safety of Robots
Christoph Bartneck, Dana Kulić, Elizabeth A. Croft +1 more
2008
Reach and grasp by people with tetraplegia using a neurally controlled robotic arm
Leigh R. Hochberg, Daniel Bacher, Beata Jarosiewicz +8 more
2012