New community-based arrangements and novel technologies can empower individuals to be active participants in their health maintenance by enabling them to self-regulate and control their health and wellness and make better health and lifestyle related decisions using community based resources and services. Mobile sensing technology and health systems, responsive to individual profiles, supported by intelligent networking infrastructures and combined with cloud/IoT computing can expand innovation for new types of interoperable services that are consumer oriented and community based. This could fuel a paradigm shift in the way health care can be, or should be, provided and received, while lessening the burden over exhausted health and social care systems. Advances have been identified in the fields of systems for personalized health monitoring, such as smartphone platforms and intelligent ubiquitous smart applications; activity profiling and lifestyle capturing, enabling the recognition of human activity and lifestyles and the deployment of platforms for health assistance and interaction support1. Delivering innovative ubiquitous eHealth and mHealth services, including citizen-cantered wellness and lifestyle management services goes well beyond the development of technical solutions. Crucial innovation is needed in the process of making and deploying large scale Information and Communication Technologies, empowering end-user services to be usable, trusted, accepted and enjoyed. This will require multi-domain, multilevel, trans-disciplinary work, grounded in theory but driven by citizens’ and healthcare professionals’ needs, expectations and capabilities and matched by business ability to bring innovation to the market. This emerging critical infrastructure is influenced by factors such as biomedical and clinical incentives, advances in mobile telecommunications and information technology developments, and the socio-economic environment. Drawing from the literature on crisis management, modern societies must be prepared for critical infrastructure breakdowns focusing on the crisis management and the need for resilience, examining strengths and weaknesses of traditional approaches to crisis preparation and crisis response. It is thus important to create the necessary research and study on a set of strategies that enhance will societal resilience and identify the strong barriers to their implementation. Thus in this proposal we aim to study and implement resilient services2 for critical to support mHealth services enabling personalization, patient inclusion and empowerment with the expectation that such systems will enhance traditional care in a crisis, and provide provision in a variety of situations where remote consultation and monitoring can be implemented despite the lack of end-to-end connectivity3. We acknowledge the diversity of already deployed or envisioned mHealth applications and the heterogeneity of network environments, where the guaranteed end-to-end connectivity assumption cannot be valid, as the setting for utilizing this promising technology to allow future mHealth services to overcome the limitations and capabilities of available communication technologies.