Abstract

The rise of smart health promotes ubiquitous healthcare services with the adoption of information and communication technologies. However, increasing demands of medical services require more computing and storage resources in proximity of medical users for intelligent sensing, processing, and analysis. Fog computing emerges to enable in situ data processing and service provision for smart health in proximity of medical users, exploiting a large number of small-scale servers. In this article, we investigate fog-enabled smart health toward cooperative and secure healthcare service provision. Specifically, we first introduce the overall infrastructure and some promising applications, including emergent healthcare service, health risk assessment, and healthcare notification. We then discuss the challenges of fog-enabled smart health from the perspectives of cooperation and security. A case study is presented to demonstrate efficient and secure health data sharing through naive Bayes classification and attribute-based encryption with assistance from fog computing. Finally, by exploring interesting future directions, more attention can be attracted to this emerging area.

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