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Code Meets Care: The Digital Shift in Health Promotion
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Author(s): Joana Nogueira (Future Healthcare Virtual Clinic, Portugal), Teresa Santos (Universidade Europeia, Lisbon, Portugal), Ana Pina (Future Healthcare Virtual Clinic, Portugal)and Sandra S. Martins (Universidade Europeia, Lisbon, Portugal)
Copyright: 2026
Pages: 42
Source title:
Reshaping Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Through Digital Innovation
Source Author(s)/Editor(s): Sónia Remondes Costa (University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto-Douro, Vila Real, Portugal)and Jorge Remondes (CEOS.PP, ISCAP, Polytechnic of Porto, Portugal)
DOI: 10.4018/979-8-3373-3531-5.ch003
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Abstract
This chapter examines the transformative evolution of digital health from fragmented technological applications into a comprehensive, multidisciplinary ecosystem that fundamentally redefines healthcare delivery and patient engagement. Driven by rapid advancements in artificial intelligence, wearable devices, the Internet of Things, digital therapeutics, multi-omics integration, and extended reality, digital health shifts care paradigms from reactive, clinician-centered models to proactive, precise, predictive, preventive, and participatory approaches. The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated widespread adoption of digital solutions, demonstrating their capacity for agile crisis response while exposing persistent challenges such as the digital divide, interoperability limitations, and inequities in access. The chapter explores how digital health addresses major systemic pressures—including the rising burden of non-communicable diseases, healthcare workforce shortages, and escalating costs—through scalable, data-driven innovations that support value-based care, real-time monitoring, personalized interventions, lifestyle modification, and improved outcomes that matter to patients. While highlighting the potential to empower individuals as active participants in their health management within everyday contexts, the discussion critically addresses key barriers: ethical concerns, regulatory fragmentation, algorithmic bias, data privacy risks, and the need for inclusive, context-sensitive implementation strategies. Ultimately, this chapter argues that realizing the full promise of digital health requires rigorous evidence generation, participatory design, equitable frameworks, and collaborative governance to ensure that technological progress translates into sustainable, resilient, and human-centered health ecosystems that promote well-being for all populations.
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