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What is Business Process Modelling (BPM)

Handbook of Research on Developments in E-Health and Telemedicine: Technological and Social Perspectives
In the field of Business Process Management, Business Process Modelling techniques and methodologies enable a better process description, considering all the involved factors (resource, activities, workflow, organization, etc.). BPM alows capturing a general scheme of activities and business procedures, and defining all their elements (i.e. objectives, inputs, outputs, resources, activity sequences and events). In systems engineering and software engineering is the activity of representing processes of an enterprise, so that the current (“as is”) process may be analyzed and improved in future (“to be”). BPM is typically performed by business analysts and managers who are seeking to improve process efficiency and quality.
Published in Chapter:
Virtual Reality for Supporting Surgical Planning
Sandra Leal (University Hospitals‘Virgen del Rocío’, Spain), Cristina Suarez (University Hospitals‘Virgen del Rocío’, Spain), J. M. Framinan (University of Seville, Spain), Carlos Luis Parra (University Hospitals‘Virgen del Rocío’, Spain), and Tomás Gómez (University Hospitals ‘Virgen del Rocío’, Spain)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-61520-670-4.ch029
Abstract
Nowadays many surgical procedures are still carried out based on the skills and manual dexterity of each surgeon. The complexity and variability of the operations (very dependent on anatomical and functional personal characteristics), the difficulty of sharing and transferring the acquired knowledge, and the problems for surgeons to train in a realistic context make up a very complex scenario. In this sense, Virtual Reality (VR) provide supporting for surgical training and planning. VR permits modeling, simulation and visualization techniques using 3-D, anatomical predictive models, which are based on realistic models of tissues and organs. The usage of these technologies as a support for surgical planning results in a reduction of the uncertainty in the surgical process, a decrease in the risks for the patients, as well as an improvement of the results. This chapter presents a case of study of a Virtual Reality tool for supporting surgical planning, called VirSSPA, that has been already successfully applied in the University Hospital “Virgen del Rocio” (Seville-Spain).
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