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Assistive Technologies for Chronically Ill. Dola Saha. Background. Assist Directly Communication Assistance Mobility Assistance Wayfinding Improving Self Monitoring Monitor Conditions and Alarm System Patient Monitoring. Background (Patient Monitoring).
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Background • Assist Directly • Communication Assistance • Mobility Assistance • Wayfinding • Improving Self Monitoring • Monitor Conditions and Alarm System • Patient Monitoring
Background (Patient Monitoring) • BASUMA – The Sixth Sense for Chronically Ill Patients • Thomas Falck, Javier Espina, Jean-Pierre Ebert, Daniel Dietterle • Development of a Novel Contactless Mechanocardiograph Device • Kouhyar Tavakolian, FaranakM. Zadeh, Yindar Chuo, Ali Vaseghi, and Bozena Kaminska • Feasibility Study and Design of aWearable System-on-a-Chip Pulse Radar for Contactless Cardiopulmonary Monitoring • Domenico Zito, Domenico Pepe, Bruno Neri, Fabio Zito, Danilo De Rossi and Antonio Lanat`a • Real-Time and Secure Wireless Health Monitoring • S. Da˘ gtas¸, G. Pekhteryev, Z. S¸ahino ˘ glu, H. C¸ am, and N. Challa • A Pervasive Telemedicine System Exploiting the DVB-T Technology • Gianmarco Angius, Danilo Pani, Luigi Raffo, Stefano Seruis, Paolo Randaccio • Ambulatory monitor derived clinical measures for continuous assessment of cardiac rehabilitation patients in a community care model • Niranjan Bidargaddi and Antti Sarela
Background (Patient Monitoring) • BASUMA – The Sixth Sense for Chronically Ill Patients • Body worn sensors monitor ECG, Blood Pressure, etc., No clinical trials • Development of a Novel Contactless Mechanocardiograph Device • Heart rate and respiration rate were measured, How to handle multiple patients in close proximity? No clinical trials • Feasibility Study and Design of aWearable System-on-a-Chip Pulse Radar for Contactless Cardiopulmonary Monitoring • Theoretical Channel Model, Theoretical System Analysis, Prototype UWB Antenna. But no clinical trials • Real-Time and Secure Wireless Health Monitoring • Framework of patient monitoring using BSN and Zigbee, no clinical trials • A Pervasive Telemedicine System Exploiting the DVB-T Technology • Patient Controlled, What happens in emergency conditions? No clinical trials • Ambulatory monitor derived clinical measures for continuous assessment of cardiac rehabilitation patients in a community care model • Monitors ECG and Mobility, No clinical trials
SMART – An Integrated Wireless System for Monitoring Unattended Patients • JAMIA February 2008 • (Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association 2008;15(1):44-53) • Authors (10) • Dorothy W. Curtis a • Esteban J. Pino b • Jacob M. Bailey e • Eugene I. Shih a • Jason Waterman a • Staal A. Vinterbo c d • Thomas O. Stair e • John V. Gutagg a • Robert A. Greenes f • Lucila Ohno-Machado c d • Collaboration (6 academic institutes) • aCS and AI Lab, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA • bUniversidad de Concepción, Departamento de Ingeniería Eléctrica, Concepción, Chile • cDecision Systems Group, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA • dDivision of Health Sciences and Technology, Harvard-Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA • eDepartment of Emergency Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA • fDepartment of Biomedical Informatics, Arizona State University, Phoenix, AZ.
SMART – Scalable Medical Alert Response Technology • Goal • Provide patient monitoring in overcrowded Emergency Department and at Disaster Sites • System • Integrates patient monitoring (ECG, SpO2), geo-positioning, signal processing, targeted alerting, and a wireless interface for caregivers • Implementation • Prototype implemented and evaluated with 145 post-triage patients at Brigham and Women’s Hospital’s Emergency Department in Boston, MA
SMART System Architecture Wireless 802.11 SSL
Patient Monitoring Device Patient wearing SMART Monitoring Gear PDA and Sensor box • SpO2 Sensor is available from Nonin • ECG Sensor was developed at MIT • PDA is HP iPAQ running Linux
Geo-Positioning System & Wireless Communication • Indoor Positioning System from Sonitor • Consists Active tags worn by patients and caregivers • Detectors at wall • Also integrated with two other Geo-Positioning Systems • Cricket • Global Positioning System • Wireless Communication is 802.11b based • (0.5Mbps of data generated for 10 patients)
SMART Central • Runs on PC with Linux • Streaming Data Manager • Receives SpO2, ECG and location data and provides access to the raw data • Decision Support Module • Analyzes the data and triggers alarm • Logistic Support Manager • Dispatches alarms to appropriate (nearest and not busy) care provider • Does not alarm a care provider within 10 minutes of last alarm acceptance • Forwards to next nearest nurse if the first one is busy
Caregiver Module • Modes • Roster of Patients • Detailed Vital Signs • Handling Alarm Conditions • Alarm • Audible buzz and vibration • “Respond” button • “Unavailable” button forwards to next provider • “Defer” button to defer for a short time Patient View Alarm View
Pilot Study • June 19, 2006 – March 30, 2007 • Total of 151 patients, maximum four at the same time
Disaster Drill • 150 healthy individuals participated in a city-wide disaster drill, 20 were transferred to BWH • SMART system setup in five minutes • Seven patients monitored simultaneously for life-threatening symptoms • Caregiver PDA was not used as all patients were in the same room.
Conclusion • Affordable, off-the-shelf, portable, easy to deploy and untethered • Security Issues with wireless ECG Data Collection • Limitation – No data showing dynamic scheduling of effective personnel utilization • Can be utilized for SMART Home for chronic care • Future work – improve the algorithms to decrease false positive