La cura parte dalla tua comunità
A global community working together to make open, collaborative health and social care solutions
opencare:
The project
The concept
The partners
What have we done so far?
http://opencare.cc/
A presentation from Professor Monika Büscher and Dr Nicola Spurling at the DecarboN8 Workshop, 'Decarbonising Transport: Connecting Carbon Targets to Action' held at the Institute for Transport Studies on 07/01/20
Slides for a workshop session on "Preparing for Tomorrow’s World: Helping University Information Services Respond to Technological, Economic and Political Change" facilitated by Brian Kelly at the Information Services 2014 conference held on 24 June 2014 at the University of Brighton.
For further information see
http://ukwebfocus.wordpress.com/events/preparing-for-tomorrows-world/
A presentation from Professor Monika Büscher and Dr Nicola Spurling at the DecarboN8 Workshop, 'Decarbonising Transport: Connecting Carbon Targets to Action' held at the Institute for Transport Studies on 07/01/20
Slides for a workshop session on "Preparing for Tomorrow’s World: Helping University Information Services Respond to Technological, Economic and Political Change" facilitated by Brian Kelly at the Information Services 2014 conference held on 24 June 2014 at the University of Brighton.
For further information see
http://ukwebfocus.wordpress.com/events/preparing-for-tomorrows-world/
Webinar: Decarboni.se – building a climate change solution web platform Global CCS Institute
This webinar provided an overview on the recently launched Decarboni.se knowledge sharing platform. Decarboni.se aims to be the best place for people to learn from over 400 organisations working to decarbonise the economy. On Decarboni.se you’ll find quality information and detailed descriptions of techniques and lessons learnt from experts around the world. This webinar presented why Decarboni.se was built, how you can use it and how it improves the knowledge sharing process for clean energy. We also presented how we’re reaching out to people (including those outside the CCS community) to tell them about the approach and get them involved in the knowledge sharing process.
This webinar was presented by Sean McClowry, General Manager - Information Management and Brian Houston, Community Manager from the Global CCS Institute.
This slidecast looks at how we undertake evaluation and the potential of Web 2.0 as a tool for evaluation. At its simplest, Evaluation 2.0 about using social software at all stages of the evaluation process in order to make it more open, more transparent and more accessible to a wider range of stakeholders. the slidecast goes on to look at Web 2.0 and the different ways we are developing and sharing knowledge, the differences between expert knowledge and crows sourced knowledge and new roles for teachers, trainers and evaluators resulting from the changing uses of social media.
The Web Management Community: Beyond IWMW and JISCMail Lists (#A4)lisbk
Slides for a workshop session on "The Web Management Community: Beyond IWMW and JISCMail Lists" facilitated by Brian Kelly, UKOLN at the IWMW 2011 event held at the University of Reading on 26-27 July 2011.
See http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/workshops/iwmw-2011/
Open Access GLAM: CC and the Public Domain for Galleries, Libraries, Archives...Jessicacoates
An updated presentation on Creative Commons and open access for galleries, libraries, archives and museums. Helps with what is out there, what you can do, and what others are doing.
We Need to Talk About Paid Editing: Sorting Out Wikipedia's Most Enduring Arg...Beutler Ink
This presentation explores the past, present and future of paid editing on Wikipedia, now one of the world's top 5 websites.
Originally presented at Wikimania 2014 in London by Andrew Lih (User:Fuzheado), Christophe Henner (User:Schiste), and William Beutler (User:WWB).
A short set of slides on the upcoming ccAustralia Case Studies Vol. II - Creative Industries Business Models. Presented at the Creative Commons Asia and Pacific conference in Seoul, 4-5 June 2010.
Welcome: Metrics and Social Web Services: Quantitative Evidence for their Use...lisbk
Rehearsal (with audio) of the Welcome slides used by Brian Kelly, UKOLN in a workshop on "Metrics and Social Web Services: Quantitative Evidence for their Use & Impact" held at the Open University on 11 July 2011.
See http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/workshops/eim-2011-07/
Case studies of implementing BS 8878 (CSUN 2012)Jonathan Hassell
Why is embedding web accessibility into your organisation's culture and processes so important? And what do organisations who have done this using BS 8878 say are the benefits? In this presentation Jonathan Hassell, the Standard's lead-author, answers these questions and poses one of his own: should BS 8878 become an International Standard, and if so, how?
Slides for a talk on "Working with Wikimedia Serbia" given by Brian Kelly, Innovation Advocate at Cetis, University of Bolton at the Eduwiki 2014 conference in Edinburgh on Friday 31 October 2013.
See https://ukwebfocus.wordpress.com/events/eduwiki-2014/
Slides for a workshop session on "Open Knowledge: Wikipedia and Beyond" facilitated by Brian Kelly and Simon Grant, Cetis at the Cetis 2014 conference at the University of Bolton on 17-18 June 2014.
See http://ukwebfocus.wordpress.com/events/cetis-2014-open-knowledge-wikipedia-and-beyond/
The long tail, the most famous concept in web2.0 introduced by Chris Anderson needs to be applied at a higher level. Let's introduce the double long tail concept.
With that new concept, many things will need to be redefined. The long tail is redefining the music industry. So will the double long tail do with financial institutions.
Webinar: Decarboni.se – building a climate change solution web platform Global CCS Institute
This webinar provided an overview on the recently launched Decarboni.se knowledge sharing platform. Decarboni.se aims to be the best place for people to learn from over 400 organisations working to decarbonise the economy. On Decarboni.se you’ll find quality information and detailed descriptions of techniques and lessons learnt from experts around the world. This webinar presented why Decarboni.se was built, how you can use it and how it improves the knowledge sharing process for clean energy. We also presented how we’re reaching out to people (including those outside the CCS community) to tell them about the approach and get them involved in the knowledge sharing process.
This webinar was presented by Sean McClowry, General Manager - Information Management and Brian Houston, Community Manager from the Global CCS Institute.
This slidecast looks at how we undertake evaluation and the potential of Web 2.0 as a tool for evaluation. At its simplest, Evaluation 2.0 about using social software at all stages of the evaluation process in order to make it more open, more transparent and more accessible to a wider range of stakeholders. the slidecast goes on to look at Web 2.0 and the different ways we are developing and sharing knowledge, the differences between expert knowledge and crows sourced knowledge and new roles for teachers, trainers and evaluators resulting from the changing uses of social media.
The Web Management Community: Beyond IWMW and JISCMail Lists (#A4)lisbk
Slides for a workshop session on "The Web Management Community: Beyond IWMW and JISCMail Lists" facilitated by Brian Kelly, UKOLN at the IWMW 2011 event held at the University of Reading on 26-27 July 2011.
See http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/workshops/iwmw-2011/
Open Access GLAM: CC and the Public Domain for Galleries, Libraries, Archives...Jessicacoates
An updated presentation on Creative Commons and open access for galleries, libraries, archives and museums. Helps with what is out there, what you can do, and what others are doing.
We Need to Talk About Paid Editing: Sorting Out Wikipedia's Most Enduring Arg...Beutler Ink
This presentation explores the past, present and future of paid editing on Wikipedia, now one of the world's top 5 websites.
Originally presented at Wikimania 2014 in London by Andrew Lih (User:Fuzheado), Christophe Henner (User:Schiste), and William Beutler (User:WWB).
A short set of slides on the upcoming ccAustralia Case Studies Vol. II - Creative Industries Business Models. Presented at the Creative Commons Asia and Pacific conference in Seoul, 4-5 June 2010.
Welcome: Metrics and Social Web Services: Quantitative Evidence for their Use...lisbk
Rehearsal (with audio) of the Welcome slides used by Brian Kelly, UKOLN in a workshop on "Metrics and Social Web Services: Quantitative Evidence for their Use & Impact" held at the Open University on 11 July 2011.
See http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/workshops/eim-2011-07/
Case studies of implementing BS 8878 (CSUN 2012)Jonathan Hassell
Why is embedding web accessibility into your organisation's culture and processes so important? And what do organisations who have done this using BS 8878 say are the benefits? In this presentation Jonathan Hassell, the Standard's lead-author, answers these questions and poses one of his own: should BS 8878 become an International Standard, and if so, how?
Slides for a talk on "Working with Wikimedia Serbia" given by Brian Kelly, Innovation Advocate at Cetis, University of Bolton at the Eduwiki 2014 conference in Edinburgh on Friday 31 October 2013.
See https://ukwebfocus.wordpress.com/events/eduwiki-2014/
Slides for a workshop session on "Open Knowledge: Wikipedia and Beyond" facilitated by Brian Kelly and Simon Grant, Cetis at the Cetis 2014 conference at the University of Bolton on 17-18 June 2014.
See http://ukwebfocus.wordpress.com/events/cetis-2014-open-knowledge-wikipedia-and-beyond/
The long tail, the most famous concept in web2.0 introduced by Chris Anderson needs to be applied at a higher level. Let's introduce the double long tail concept.
With that new concept, many things will need to be redefined. The long tail is redefining the music industry. So will the double long tail do with financial institutions.
Graph coloring is an important concept in graph theory. It is a special kind of problem in which we have assign colors to certain elements of the graph along with certain constraints. Suppose we are given K colors, we have to color the vertices in such a way that no two adjacent vertices of the graph have the same color, this is known as vertex coloring, similarly we have edge coloring and face coloring. The coloring problem has a huge number of applications in modern computer science such as making schedule of time table , Sudoku, Bipartite graphs , Map coloring, data mining, networking. In this paper we are going to focus on certain applications like Final exam timetabling, Aircraft Scheduling, guarding an art gallery.
A presentation on biosensors and its application,all datas r mainly collected from google search,and from some books by or teachers. Hope it will help you...leave your rply,, :)
Crowdsourced Learning: the power of the synergy that is achieved through the billions of interactions among the millions of experts in the world, freely helping each other to learn from the best each other is.
A presentation by Marlon Cornelia, ANSA-EAP
Youth Anti-Corruption Forum in Brussels on 27 May 2010.
Session: ICT for Governance and Anti-Corruption (GAC)
Presentation given for University of British Columbia Oct. 23, 2013 as part of Open Access Week.
Presentation explores open practices throughout society including education with a special focus on what freedoms openness brings and who is using those freedoms.
Stefano Del Furia - Inclusive Design - Codemotion Rome 2019Codemotion
An inclusive type of approach creates better solutions, because it aims to benefit all users, therefore also those who must cope with disabilities. Thinking in terms of accessibility throughout the entire process, enables the creation of solutions for mobile applications and websites that are actually evolved and not merely alternative. When designing for human diversity, we make possible a global kind of partecipation, with a higher impact on positivity exchange and emotional benefits than we would have when addressing just the disabilities.
Discourse Centered Collective Intelligence Platforms for Social InnovationAnna De Liddo
PPT presentation of the "URBAN LIVING LABS AS SOCIO-DIGITAL SPHERES FOR EXPERIMENTING GOVERNANCE"
International Workshop
Cities are more and more witnessing the emergence of innovation initiatives,
indifferently originated by top-down or bottom-up intentionality, that are being
observed and analysed as Urban Living Labs, i.e. socio-digital innovation ecosystems
made up of creative communities of people producing innovation at urban
level with the support of a number of methods and tools helping to co-create value
out of the experience of interaction between the citizen/customer and
private/public actors.
These Urban living Labs are activators of experiments of governance innovation
which include people, institutions, private actors, relationships, values, processes,
tools and physical or financial infrastructures, that could trigger, generate, facilitate
and catalyse innovation in the city. These are spheres for knowledge creation
within the city and differ for dimensions, scale of action, nature (top-down or
bottom-up), organizational structure, and also for the way in which the participants
acts and are represented. They are also heterogeneous for the space of action in
which they emerge and can be interrelated and connected by topics, contexts,
interests, practices, and level of maturity in many different ways.
In Urban Living Labs new governance modes and models are experimented,
where participants acts in several and not pre-defined ways, creating complex
organizations able to integrate hierarchical and horizontal structures and creating
specific spheres of action stimulating collective testing and learning. In these
environments, governance is experimented between formal and informal publicprivate-
people partnerships able to shape innovative dialogues between citizens
and city institutions.
In this perspective the workshop aims at investigating some questions:
1.What kind of organizations is shaped in Urban Living Labs?
2.How is governance modelled in Urban living labs?
3.How is governance experimented?
4.What level of institutionalization is opportune for the emerging governance?
Not Your Grandparents’ or Great-grandparents' ExensionAnne Adrian
Presentation for a guest lecture in a a graduate level Extension Methods class.
A blog post explanation the points in more detal can be found http://blog.anneadrian.com/2014/04/guest-lecture-on-extension-engagement.html
V2 the world speaks web rtc-mobile social innovation manifesto by ted ritzer ...Ted Ritzer
The second draft of The World Speaks WebRTC-Mobile Social Innovation Manifesto that has added a Lego Software approach that combines Open Peer open source technology with Privacy by Design Principles that empower the individual with the power of WebRTC while protecting their individual's privacy.
A presentation delivered at a workshop during the Cultural Innovators Network Forum 2017 in Berlin.
#OpenVillage: connecting community spaces for living and working together in the post-job economy
Description: How do we build communities which deliver cultural, social and economic value, but care for members' well-being? OpenVillage is an open project in-the-making by Edgeryders. We design, scout and create together spaces where people can work on their projects by joining their time, money, equipment to produce sustainable work.
Join in to build this together! http://openvillage.edgeryders.eu/
Facilitating Communities of Practice in the Network EraNancy Wright White
This is the set of slides used for the morning workshop on facilitating communities, along with two other sets of slides that might be useful later to participants, but which we did not conver/talk about. So be forewarned!
The World Speaks Web RTC-Mobile Social Innovation Manifesto Ted Ritzer July 1...Ted Ritzer
The World Speaks WebRTC-Mobile Social Innovation Manifesto for a Better World
Theme song for the spirit of this presentation at:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JuldtvFnhv4
India Clinical Trials Market: Industry Size and Growth Trends [2030] Analyzed...Kumar Satyam
According to TechSci Research report, "India Clinical Trials Market- By Region, Competition, Forecast & Opportunities, 2030F," the India Clinical Trials Market was valued at USD 2.05 billion in 2024 and is projected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 8.64% through 2030. The market is driven by a variety of factors, making India an attractive destination for pharmaceutical companies and researchers. India's vast and diverse patient population, cost-effective operational environment, and a large pool of skilled medical professionals contribute significantly to the market's growth. Additionally, increasing government support in streamlining regulations and the growing prevalence of lifestyle diseases further propel the clinical trials market.
Growing Prevalence of Lifestyle Diseases
The rising incidence of lifestyle diseases such as diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, and cancer is a major trend driving the clinical trials market in India. These conditions necessitate the development and testing of new treatment methods, creating a robust demand for clinical trials. The increasing burden of these diseases highlights the need for innovative therapies and underscores the importance of India as a key player in global clinical research.
Telehealth Psychology Building Trust with Clients.pptxThe Harvest Clinic
Telehealth psychology is a digital approach that offers psychological services and mental health care to clients remotely, using technologies like video conferencing, phone calls, text messaging, and mobile apps for communication.
Antibiotic Stewardship by Anushri Srivastava.pptxAnushriSrivastav
Stewardship is the act of taking good care of something.
Antimicrobial stewardship is a coordinated program that promotes the appropriate use of antimicrobials (including antibiotics), improves patient outcomes, reduces microbial resistance, and decreases the spread of infections caused by multidrug-resistant organisms.
WHO launched the Global Antimicrobial Resistance and Use Surveillance System (GLASS) in 2015 to fill knowledge gaps and inform strategies at all levels.
ACCORDING TO apic.org,
Antimicrobial stewardship is a coordinated program that promotes the appropriate use of antimicrobials (including antibiotics), improves patient outcomes, reduces microbial resistance, and decreases the spread of infections caused by multidrug-resistant organisms.
ACCORDING TO pewtrusts.org,
Antibiotic stewardship refers to efforts in doctors’ offices, hospitals, long term care facilities, and other health care settings to ensure that antibiotics are used only when necessary and appropriate
According to WHO,
Antimicrobial stewardship is a systematic approach to educate and support health care professionals to follow evidence-based guidelines for prescribing and administering antimicrobials
In 1996, John McGowan and Dale Gerding first applied the term antimicrobial stewardship, where they suggested a causal association between antimicrobial agent use and resistance. They also focused on the urgency of large-scale controlled trials of antimicrobial-use regulation employing sophisticated epidemiologic methods, molecular typing, and precise resistance mechanism analysis.
Antimicrobial Stewardship(AMS) refers to the optimal selection, dosing, and duration of antimicrobial treatment resulting in the best clinical outcome with minimal side effects to the patients and minimal impact on subsequent resistance.
According to the 2019 report, in the US, more than 2.8 million antibiotic-resistant infections occur each year, and more than 35000 people die. In addition to this, it also mentioned that 223,900 cases of Clostridoides difficile occurred in 2017, of which 12800 people died. The report did not include viruses or parasites
VISION
Being proactive
Supporting optimal animal and human health
Exploring ways to reduce overall use of antimicrobials
Using the drugs that prevent and treat disease by killing microscopic organisms in a responsible way
GOAL
to prevent the generation and spread of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Doing so will preserve the effectiveness of these drugs in animals and humans for years to come.
being to preserve human and animal health and the effectiveness of antimicrobial medications.
to implement a multidisciplinary approach in assembling a stewardship team to include an infectious disease physician, a clinical pharmacist with infectious diseases training, infection preventionist, and a close collaboration with the staff in the clinical microbiology laboratory
to prevent antimicrobial overuse, misuse and abuse.
to minimize the developme
QA Paediatric dentistry department, Hospital Melaka 2020Azreen Aj
QA study - To improve the 6th monthly recall rate post-comprehensive dental treatment under general anaesthesia in paediatric dentistry department, Hospital Melaka
One of the most developed cities of India, the city of Chennai is the capital of Tamilnadu and many people from different parts of India come here to earn their bread and butter. Being a metropolitan, the city is filled with towering building and beaches but the sad part as with almost every Indian city
Medical Technology Tackles New Health Care Demand - Research Report - March 2...pchutichetpong
M Capital Group (“MCG”) predicts that with, against, despite, and even without the global pandemic, the medical technology (MedTech) industry shows signs of continuous healthy growth, driven by smaller, faster, and cheaper devices, growing demand for home-based applications, technological innovation, strategic acquisitions, investments, and SPAC listings. MCG predicts that this should reflects itself in annual growth of over 6%, well beyond 2028.
According to Chris Mouchabhani, Managing Partner at M Capital Group, “Despite all economic scenarios that one may consider, beyond overall economic shocks, medical technology should remain one of the most promising and robust sectors over the short to medium term and well beyond 2028.”
There is a movement towards home-based care for the elderly, next generation scanning and MRI devices, wearable technology, artificial intelligence incorporation, and online connectivity. Experts also see a focus on predictive, preventive, personalized, participatory, and precision medicine, with rising levels of integration of home care and technological innovation.
The average cost of treatment has been rising across the board, creating additional financial burdens to governments, healthcare providers and insurance companies. According to MCG, cost-per-inpatient-stay in the United States alone rose on average annually by over 13% between 2014 to 2021, leading MedTech to focus research efforts on optimized medical equipment at lower price points, whilst emphasizing portability and ease of use. Namely, 46% of the 1,008 medical technology companies in the 2021 MedTech Innovator (“MTI”) database are focusing on prevention, wellness, detection, or diagnosis, signaling a clear push for preventive care to also tackle costs.
In addition, there has also been a lasting impact on consumer and medical demand for home care, supported by the pandemic. Lockdowns, closure of care facilities, and healthcare systems subjected to capacity pressure, accelerated demand away from traditional inpatient care. Now, outpatient care solutions are driving industry production, with nearly 70% of recent diagnostics start-up companies producing products in areas such as ambulatory clinics, at-home care, and self-administered diagnostics.
10. XIX century Welfare State: Social and Health
services provided from the State.
> Professionalized care
> One-size-fits-all approach
> Top-down model
Crisis of Welfare State
costs
quality
more quality = more
costs????
13. research in action
on line off line interaction
sharing (toughts, experience, plan, prototype,
solution)
collective intelligence to solve (or at least approach
very complex dynamics)
18. Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul
meeting the
communities
workshops
co-design
sessions
prototyping
research /
playbook
LOTE5
online
Arduino
Day
Milan
Design
Week
20. Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul
meeting the
communities
workshops
co-design
sessions
prototyping
research /
playbook
LOTE5
online
Arduino
Day
Milan
Design
Week
22. Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul
meeting the
communities
workshops
co-design
sessions
prototyping
research /
playbook
LOTE5
online
Arduino
Day
Milan
Design
Week
25. Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul
meeting the
communities
workshops
co-design
sessions
prototyping
research /
playbook
LOTE5
online
Arduino
Day
Milan
Design
Week
27. Outcomes:
Fatti più in là
The Challenge:
How do you give and receive care?
The Question:
How can we help keep handicapped parking lots
used by the ones who need it?
The Problem:
Handicapped parking lots stolen by others.
The Solution:
A system to be added to the lot that either alarms
the police, or creates enough noise to bring shame
to the person stealing the lot.
Channels:
#Communities, people and places
#Hacking and making
#Healthcare and social care
#Network science
#Open science and technologies
28. Outcomes:
Step Up
The Challenge:
How are people on the move caring and being
cared for?
The Question:
How can you navigate places more freely and
independently on a wheelchair
The Problem:
Mobility and privacy while using a wheelchair
The Solution:
A hardware that can be mounted to wheelchairs?
Channels:
#Communities, people and places
#Hacking and making
#Healthcare and social care
#People on the move
29. Outcomes:
InPè
The Challenge:
How do you give and receive care?
The Question:
Helping a caretaker monitor an elderly
The Problem:
What if an elderly fell down while they were alone
The Solution:
A wearable that can alarm/call others who can
help the elderly
Channels:
#Communities, people and places
#Hacking and making
#Healthcare and social care
#Open science and technologies
32. ● OPENCARE.CC (ENG): Basic information around Opencare with
links to partners and initial project proposal
● PLAYBOOK (ENG) A guide to opencare’s collaborative design and
community building process
● GITHUB REPOSITORY Documentation and wiki for all prototypes
● WEMAKE/OPENCARE (IT) A brief intro around opencare and
milestones
● NEWSLETTER (ITA): to receive invitations to events, information and
weekly updates about the European project and the prototype
itself;
● BLOG (ITA): to have access to opencare’s personal journal and
report, with in-depth information about past and future events,
case studies and more
● WORKSPACE (ENG): in order to communicate directly with
opencare partners on Edgeryders’ platform
References
it’s a two year european project we’re involved in
there are many partner and people involved
Bando ICT 10/2015: Collective Awareness Platforms for Sustainability and Social Innovation
GLI OBIETTIVI DELLA CALL:
Sfruttare al meglio la potenza collaborativa delle reti ICT (nel connettere persone, conoscenze, competenze) per creare maggiore consapevolezza sulle sfide che la nostra società si trova ad affrontare in termini di sostenibilità (a livello sociale, ambientale e politico)
Sostenere processi decisionali più consapevoli e partecipati da cittadini, contribuendo così a diffondere comportamenti e stili di vita più sostenibili
ok, this is our statements but why?
ok but why?
trends
issue
stories
ok but why?
trends
spending more money
getting older and older
issue
no such resources (cut to the walfare state)
poverty also in the middle class
stories
so how?
research in action
on line off line interaction
sharing (toughts, experience, plan, prototype, solution)
collecting intelligence to solve (or at least approach very complex dynamics)
final goal is:
what are the elements that foster these kind of solutions?
is there a way to let this happen more often?
so how?
research in action
on line off line interaction
sharing (toughts, experience, plan, prototype, solution)
collecting intelligence to solve (or at least approach very complex dynamics)
final goal is:
what are the elements that foster these kind of solutions?
is there a way to let this happen more often?