Facebook posts can predict diabetes, mental health issues: Study
One model only analysing the Facebook post language, another that used demographics such as age and sex, and the last that combined the two datasets.

One model only analysing the Facebook post language, another that used demographics such as age and sex, and the last that combined the two datasets.
Technology in healthcare has the potential to deliver advanced patient care, in an easier and more efficient way. A secure anywhere, anytime, digital workspace helps deliver a great user experience and frees up more time to dedicate to the core competency of caregiving.
For nearly two decades, Digital Health (earlier referred to by various terminologies, e.g. telemedicine, eHealth, telehealth, mobile health, mHealth etc.) has been talked about as a key innovation to transform healthcare delivery, but things never took off the way it was expected.
Young patients are keen on having a technologically connected healthcare experience, and physicians can easily achieve it through use of cost-effective / cost-free state-of-art technology clinics / hospitals.
What is needed then, is a hybrid model that combines hi-tech with hi-touch.
The e-Health programme envisages to create an effective IT-enabled integrated framework to ensure effectual health care delivery model that will ensure that every citizen is connected and a centralized database of healthcare information is created.