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This work compiles the comparison of different medical drug-dispensers. A drug-dispenser is a device which allows it from a larger amount of drugs to take a smaller one. To perform this comparison 15 requirements for the dispensers were found. The requirements "organization", "remind" and "ergonomics" are assigned to the taking-easement. "Compliance", "adaptability", "selectivity", "persistence", "functionality", "correctness" and "specificity / sensitivity" belong to the compliance, which is therapy loyalty. With it this category makes most demands. The category storage collects "hygiene", "pharmaceutical forms" and "robustness". Finally, the requirements "clarity" and "data protection" were assigned to other requirements. After this, different dispenser-concepts were first introduced and analyzed on the fulfillment of the requirements. The following concepts were analyzed: pillbox, oneweek-dispenser, Blister, tubular bag, MEMS, OtCM, electronic Dispenser, smartphone application. According to the analysis the dispensers could be compared with each other. It turned out that all concepts show deficits. Hence the author developed an own concept which fulfils all requirements except for two from well to very well. It represents the mightiest concept.
This diploma thesis describes the concept and implementation of a software router for policy-based Internet regulation. It is based on the ontology InFO described by Kasten and Scherp. InFO is destined for a system-independent description of regulation mechanisms. Additionally, InFO enables a transparent regulation by linking background information to the regulation mechanisms. The InFO extension RFCO extends the ontology with router-specific entities. A software router is developed to implement RFCO at the IP level. The regulation is designed to be transparent by letting the router inform affected users about the regulation measures. The router implementation is exemplarily tested in a virtual network environment.
Die Diplomarbeit "Entwicklung eines Telemedizinregister-Anforderungskatalog" behandelt die Erstellung eines Anforderungskatalogs für die Entwicklung eines im telemedizinischen Bereich anwendbaren Registers zur Unterstützung von Abrechnungsvorgängen. Diese werden im deutschen Gesundheitswesen zwischen telemedizinischen Dienstleistern und Kostenträgern in Zusammenhang mit der integrierten Versorgungsform durchgeführt, um die Finanzierung durchgeführter telemedizinischer Behandlungen abzurechnen. Dabei dient das Telemedizinregister als eine datenvorhaltende Speicherstelle, die Kopien von Behandlungsdaten telemedizinischer Dienstleister aufnimmt und deren Verarbeitungsprozesse im Register protokolliert. Den beteiligten Kostenträgern wird Zugriff auf dieses Telemedizinregister gewährt, um die Validität der Therapiedaten überprüfen zu können, die ihnen durch telemedizinische Dienstleister zur Analyse vorgelegt werden. Die Arbeit beschreibt die theoretischen Grundlagen der Bereiche Datenschutz und Telemedizin, mit denen Anforderungslisten und ein SOLL-Modell eines Telemedizinregisters erstellt werden. Dieses Modell setzt sich aus Datenmodellen und Prozessbeschreibungen zusammen und wird mit Hilfe eines praktischen Beispiels einer telemedizinischen Behandlung überprüft. Die Integration verschiedener Standards, welche bei Datenaustausch-Prozessen eingesetzt werden können, ist ein weiterer Teil zur Konzeptionierung des Telemedizinregisters, zu dem mögliche Anwendungsfelder zur Erweiterung der Funktionalität beschrieben werden.
German politicians have identified a need for greater citizen involvement in decision-making than in the past, as confirmed by a recent German parliamentarians study ("DEUPAS"). As in other forms of social interactions, the Internet provides significant potential to serve as the digital interface between citizens and decision-makers: in the recent past, dedicated electronic participation ("e-participation") platforms (e.g. dedicated websites) have been provided by politicians and governments in an attempt to gather citizens" feedback and comment on a particular issue or subject. Some of these have been successful, but a large proportion of them are grossly under-used " often only small numbers of citizens use them. Over the same time period, enthusiasm of Society for social networks has increased and is now commonplace. Many citizens use social networks such as Facebook and Twitter for all kinds of purposes, and in some cases to discuss political issues.
Social networks are therefore obviously attractive to politicians " from local government to federal agencies, politicians have integrated social media into their daily work. However, there is a significant challenge regarding the usefulness of social networks. The problem is the continuous increase in digital information: social networks contain vast amounts of information, and it is impossible for a human to manually filter the relevant information from the irrelevant (so-called "information overload"). Even using the search tools provided by social networks, it is still a huge task for a human to determine meanings and themes from the multitude of search results. New technologies and concepts have been proposed to provide summaries of masses of information through lexical analysis of social media messages, and therefore they promise an easy and quick overview of the information.
This thesis examines the relevance of these analyses" results, for the use in everyday political life, with the emphasis on the social networks Facebook and Twitter as data sources. Here we make use of the WeGov Toolbox and its analysis components that were developed during the EU project WeGov. The assessment has been performed in consultation with actual policy-makers from different levels of German government: policy-makers from the German Federal Parliament, the State Parliament North Rhine-Westphalia, the State Chancellery of the Saarland and the cities of Cologne and Kempten all took part in the study. Our method was to execute the analyses on data collected from Facebook and Twitter, and present the results to the policy-makers, who would then evaluate them using a mixture of qualitative methods.
The responses of the participants have provided us with some useful conclusions:
1) None of the participants believe that e-participation is possible in this way. But participants confirm that "citizen-friendliness" can be supported by this approach.
2) The most likely users for the summarisation tools are those who have experience with social networks, but are not "power users". The reason being is that "power users" already knew the relevant information provided by analysis tools. But without any experiences for social networks it is hard to interpret the analysis results the right way.
3) The evaluation has considered geographical aspects, and related this to e.g. a politician- constituency as a local area of social networks. Comparing the rural to the urban areas, it is shown that the amount of relevant political information in the rural areas is low. While the proportion of publicly available information in urban areas is relatively high, the proportion in the rural areas is much lower.
The findings that result from the engagement with policy-makers will be systematically surveyed and validated within this thesis.