The Internet of Things Meets Health Behavior Change: Interventions for Children 1.0 CNE


Nurses have not been educated about the technological capabilities for context sensing related to health behaviors and what the promise is for leveraging these technologies. The following presentation aims to narrow this practice gap by providing education on the possibilities for promoting health behavior change using technology for context sensing through applications. 
 
 
Accreditation Statement: University of Texas at Austin School of Nursing is accredited as a provider of nursing continuing professional development by the American Nurses Credentialing Center's Commission on Accreditation.
 
Requirements for Successful Completion: To receive contact hours for this continuing education activity, the participant must complete the entire online module and complete and submit the evaluation form. Once the evaluation form has been submitted, a “Certificate of Successful Completion” will be awarded for 1.0 contact hours and will be available in your Learning Express account under "View/Print CE Credit"

Learning outcome: Registered nurses will report desire to change practice related to knowledge increase regarding empowering patients to use health technology to address chronic disease self-management. Focus will be on challenges specific to the aging population, youth, and underserved populations, exploring digital health research possibilities and limitations within the framework of ethical and legal boundaries.
 
The activity’s Nurse Planner has determined that no one who has the ability to control the content of this CNE activity – planning committee members and presenters/authors/content reviewers – has a conflict of interest.   
 
This activity expires May 1, 2024
 
Click on the bar below to access the video content for this course. The sharing of links or content is strictly prohibited. 

Fee

$20.00

CE Hours

1.00

CE Units

0.100

Activity Type

Knowledge

Target Audience(s)

Registered Nurses
Researchers

 

 

Nurses have not been educated about the technological capabilities for context sensing related to health behaviors and what the promise is for leveraging these technologies. The following presentation aims to narrow this practice gap by providing education on the possibilities for promoting health behavior change using technology for context sensing through applications. 

Speaker(s)/Author(s)

Christine Julien picture

Christine Julien, DSc
Associate Dean for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion & Professor, UT Austin


Brief Bio : Christine Julien, DSc, is a professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Texas at Austin. She is also the Associate Dean for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in the Cockrell School of Engineering. Dr. Julien is the director of the Mobile and Pervasive Computing Group, where her research focuses on the intersection of software engineering and dynamic, unpredictable networked environments. Her specific focus is on the development of models, abstractions, tools, and middleware whose goals are to ease the software engineering burden associated with building applications for pervasive and mobile computing environments. Dr. Julien’s current projects focus on using pervasive computing and wearable technologies to incentivize or motivate healthy behaviors.

Release Date: May 1, 2022
Credit Expiration Date: May 1, 2024

CE Hours

1.00

Fee

$20.00