Abstract

Background: The use of intelligent decision support systems (IDSS) is widespread in the healthcare industry, particularly for real-time data, client and family history datasets, and prevalent patient features. Objective: A massive chunk of various kinds of health data sets, including sensor information, medical evidence, and omic statistics, are produced by the modern techniques in this field and eventually transferred to a machine learning (ML) element for extracting data, categorization, as well as mining. Method: In recent times, many patents have been focused on healthcare monitoring; however, they do not adequately incorporate appropriate algorithms for data collection, analysis, and prediction. The data collected is used for predictive modelling, then additionally, machine learning techniques are assisting to compare acquired datasets mathematically for decision-making platforms that may learn to recognise the recent trend and anticipated future problems. Depending on the dataset type, ML-based techniques can assess the circumstances. Training datasets are crucial for correctly anticipating both current and emerging events as well as new challenges. Results: Since the importance of data acquisition determines how well learning models function, any deformed data of the types of dirty data, noisy data, unstructured data, and inadequate information results in inaccurate detection, estimate, and prediction. Conclusion: Additionally, in contrast to other approaches, the experimental findings demonstrate the usefulness of the proposed method as a widespread implementation of machine learning algorithms within healthcare systems.

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