Well-being Services@Work
From AMI@Work Communities Wiki
[edit] Community chairs
| | Niilo Saranummi Chair (email) VTT Information Technology, Tampere, Finland |
| | Val Jones Co-Chair (email) University of Twente, Enschede, The Netherlands |
[edit] Events
- eHealth High Level Conference 2012 - Copenhagen, Denmark
See Community News
- The Royal Society, London, UK, 26-28 September 2011
26th International Symposium on Computer and Information Sciences
See Community News
Welcome to the home page of the Well-being Services@Work community!
Free membership is open to everyone willing to contribute to the discussion and shaping of future Collaborative Environments. This website is aiming at providing valuable information about research fields defined in the community Research Topics (see the Well-being Services@Work Community list of Research Topics) as well as supporting members discussion and interaction.
- If you are a visitor then you can register and join the current 906 members of the Well-being Services@Work community!
- In case you already are a member of the AMI@Work Family of Communities and would like to join us, then you just need to tick the box of our community in your profile into Myspace
- Click here to know more about the Well-being Services@Work Community.
- members of the Well-being Services@work Community can directly access their community shared workspace.
[edit] Community News
Feel free to edit any news that is relevant for your Community
- 26th International Symposium on Computer and Information Sciences, The Royal Society, London, UK, 26-28 September 2011
Val Jones will present: "Support for Resilient Communications in Future Disaster Management", Val Jones, Georgios Karagiannis and Sonia Heemstra De Groot,
reporting recent research on ICT for Major Incident Management (follow up of work from IST MOSAIC and Ami_at_Work, Well-Being Services_at_Work)
http://san.ee.ic.ac.uk/iscis2011/
- eHealth High Level Conference 2012 - Copenhagen, Denmark
The 10th edition of the ministerial eHealth conference will take place 7-9 May in Copenhagen, Denmark within the eHealth week 2012 together with the World of Health IT conference and exhibition.
http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/activities/health/policy/ehealth_conf/index_en.htm
[edit] Community New Members
Welcome to the lastest 10 new members:
- Alistairs Dirua
- kunal chatterjee
- pankaj joshi
- Adam Yeoh
- Winifred Awour
- JESUS MARTINEZ
- GURU THAKRE
- Konstantin Hristov
- sanjay pandey
- Zafer Kurdakul
[edit] About Well-being Services@Work community
Well-being Services@Work is the name given by the European Commission's New Working Environments Unit to Next Generation Health and Well-being Working Environments, comprising innovative technical solutions as well as socioeconomic and policy- related aspects.
"Health Continuum" – Vision of Future Health Services The change pressures and issues discussed above have lead to a redefinition of the content of healthcare, the “health continuum” defined as follows (see Figure 1 below): Being able to manage one's health, well-being and illnesses with support of information and expert services when needed independent of location. The rationale behind this definition is that there is a widely shared understanding that well-being, health and illnesses form a continuum. They need to be handled as an integrated whole. However, healthcare systems have been created to treat illnesses. Turning them around to be citizen centric and proactive is a major challenge.
The health continuum is characterised by two axes. One deals with how much health professionals are involved in the provision of the services and the other with whether the actions taken are proactively seeking to prevent illness episodes or reactively seeking to care for and cure illnesses. Acute illness episodes form the other end of the continuum, whereas wellness management and active sports form the other. In between these is the region where so called risk factors are elevated and some proactive and reactive measures are taken (like exercise, diet and medication) to prevent an illness to develop. The management of chronic degenerative diseases is also in the middle ground. Here the role of the patient is still central as (s)he has to follow a rather strict set of rules of behaviour (called compliance) in order to manage her / his chronic condition and to avoid illness episodes. The last segment of this future health continuum covers home care and independent living. The former refers to medical procedures (diagnostic, therapeutic and monitoring) that can be performed outside hospital walls in the homes and even location independently. Developments in medical devices and ICT allow a large number of procedures to be performed in this way while still being overseen by healthcare professionals. Independent living support stretches this concept even further by seeking to bring services to the homes of elderly and disabled individuals that allow them to lead independent lives and be integrated with the society.
Parallel to these changes in traditional healthcare services a more radical change is taking place. This emerging trend can be called “health continuum” where the citizen and patient also is expected to play an active role together with the healthcare team of specialised professionals. With the ageing population and current life styles chronic degenerative diseases are becoming more prevalent. The proper management of such conditions based on clinical evidence mandates active interventions to change life styles, diet and to increase exercise. Wellness management (Active Health) is seen as a highly important instrument to maintain an acceptable level of health. The role of the individual in carrying out these interventions is of course central for success. A further extension of health relates to facilitating the independent living of elderly in their natural surroundings by means of technology and technology based services. The widened scope of health services calls for new means to finance and provide the services. Whereas in the past healthcare could be characterised as mostly a publicly funded service environment, in the future there will be larger mix of financing schemes and public and private providers.



