Cloud-Native Smart Health Platforms: Scalable Machine Learning Deployment for Cardiovascular Prediction through Heroku, Salesforce, and Urban Data Ecosystems
Abstract
The convergence of cloud computing, machine learning, and smart city infrastructures has transformed the architecture of contemporary healthcare delivery systems. Cardiovascular diseases remain among the leading causes of mortality globally, necessitating predictive, scalable, and interoperable technological solutions. Recent scholarship highlights the increasing feasibility of deploying machine learning models for heart disease prediction through cloud-native platforms such as Heroku, Salesforce-integrated environments, and large-scale urban data ecosystems. However, while prior research addresses isolated components-machine learning algorithms, platform-as-a-service migration, smart city platforms, and IoT-enabled health monitoring-there remains a significant conceptual and architectural gap in integrating these domains into a unified, scalable health intelligence framework.
This research synthesizes insights from cloud platform engineering, machine learning in healthcare, IoT-based heart monitoring, and smart city big data infrastructures to propose a comprehensive architecture for scalable cardiovascular prediction systems. Drawing upon prior work in Heroku-based deployment models, heterogeneous cloud migration strategies, AWS machine learning operationalization, HealthCloud frameworks, and smart city data platforms, this study develops a theoretically grounded, deployment-ready model that emphasizes scalability, interoperability, real-time analytics, and citizen-centric service delivery.
Methodologically, the research undertakes a conceptual integration approach, critically analyzing and synthesizing the referenced literature to construct a layered cloud architecture capable of integrating patient-level medical data with hyper-local urban contextual data. The findings demonstrate that platform-as-a-service ecosystems, when combined with CRM-based healthcare workflows and machine learning pipelines, enable rapid deployment, elasticity, and sustainable scaling within smart city infrastructures.
The discussion explores theoretical implications for cloud governance, healthcare ethics, predictive reliability, and urban sustainability. Limitations and future research directions are elaborated in relation to data heterogeneity, regulatory compliance, and cross-cloud orchestration.
This article contributes a comprehensive theoretical and architectural framework for next-generation cardiovascular prediction systems within smart health cities.
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