Thursday, 2 March 2023

A Technology Analysis of Wearable Sensors for Monitoring Healthcare System | Chapter 8 | Recent Progress in Science and Technology Vol. 5

 Access to status health care is fundamental to maintaining material and mental comfort in modern society. If you be going to enjoy existence's luxuries, you need to take care of your material. It's a fact of life that all will, by pure chance, need medical consideration. The value of health management cannot be overstated. Recent research has shown that the cost of health management using common methods is prohibitive for the average woman. Those who cannot give proper medical consideration either have to endure through their conditions or make sacrifices in their energy by choosing less high-priced therapies. Wearable sensors have the potential to revolutionise the health care manufacturing by allowing for nearby and inexpensive health listening. This article describes the shift from the standard method of monitoring alive healthcare indicators to the use of wearable sensors. Wearable sensors are trying to set the groundwork for hopeful results in the healing industry on account of technological improvements.

Author(s) Details:

B. Ashreetha,
Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering College, Sree Vidyanikethan Engineering College, Mohan Babu University, Tirupati,Andhra Pradesh, India.

V. Dankan Gowda,
Department of Electronics and Communication Engineering, BMS Institute of Technology and Management, Bangalore, Karnataka, India.

Santosh Das,
Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Omdayal Group of Institutions, Uluberia, Howrah, West Bengal, India.

R. Shekhar,
Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Alliance University, Bangalore, Karnataka, India.

Venkatesan Hariram,
Department of Practice of Medicine, Vinayaka Mission's Homoeopathic Medical College and Hospital, A Constituent College of Vinayaka Mission's Research Foundation Deemed to be University, Salem, Tamilnadu, India.

Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/RPST-V5/article/view/9723

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