Abstract
A range of recommendations exists on how to obtain a valid blood pressure. With the blood pressure devices currently available it cannot be verified whether a user is actually following these recommendations or not. This paper reports on the findings from a feasibility study on ubiquitous sensing of user behavioral context during blood pressure monitoring in the home setting. A prototype system using a context-aware chair-cover is evaluated through laboratory experiments and user evaluation. Results indicate that relevant user-context can be successfully monitored. Findings may lead to better user guidance and increase the quality of data available to caretakers. © 2011 ICST.
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CITATION STYLE
Wagner, S., Toftegaard, T. S., & Bertelsen, O. W. (2011). Increased data quality in home blood pressure monitoring through context awareness. In 2011 5th International Conference on Pervasive Computing Technologies for Healthcare and Workshops, PervasiveHealth 2011 (pp. 234–237). https://doi.org/10.4108/icst.pervasivehealth.2011.245968
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