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Internet of Things for Mental Health: Open Issues in Data Acquisition, Self-Organization, Service Level Agreement, and Identity Management

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18031327

Keywords

mental health; Internet of Things (IoT); security; self-organization; service level agreement

Funding

  1. National Council of Science and Technology (CONACYT)
  2. Sonora Institute of Technology (ITSON) via the PROFAPI program [PROFAPI_2020_0055]
  3. Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities (MICINN) project Advanced Computing Architectures and Machine Learning-Based Solutions for Complex Problems in Bioinformatics, Biotechnology and Biomedicine [RTI2018-101674-B-I00]

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The rising global cases of mental illness pose an urgent health threat, while IoT technologies offer new capabilities in early patient care. This paper comprehensively surveys the intersection of IoT and mental health disorders, evaluating various platforms, methods, devices, and identifying potential challenges for effective IoT use in mental health care.
The increase of mental illness cases around the world can be described as an urgent and serious global health threat. Around 500 million people suffer from mental disorders, among which depression, schizophrenia, and dementia are the most prevalent. Revolutionary technological paradigms such as the Internet of Things (IoT) provide us with new capabilities to detect, assess, and care for patients early. This paper comprehensively survey works done at the intersection between IoT and mental health disorders. We evaluate multiple computational platforms, methods and devices, as well as study results and potential open issues for the effective use of IoT systems in mental health. We particularly elaborate on relevant open challenges in the use of existing IoT solutions for mental health care, which can be relevant given the potential impairments in some mental health patients such as data acquisition issues, lack of self-organization of devices and service level agreement, and security, privacy and consent issues, among others. We aim at opening the conversation for future research in this rather emerging area by outlining possible new paths based on the results and conclusions of this work.

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