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Health Applications of Wireless Technology

Health Applications of Wireless Technology. Monitoring and Improving Patient Flow Presented by Katherine ChengLi. Presentation Overview. Introduction Technologies Used Wi-Fi Positioning Systems Wi-Fi Fingerprinting Wi-Fi Triangulation Ekahau’s RTLS Patient Flow Monitoring Conclusion.

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Health Applications of Wireless Technology

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  1. Health Applications of Wireless Technology

    Monitoring and Improving Patient Flow Presented by Katherine ChengLi
  2. Presentation Overview Introduction Technologies Used Wi-Fi Positioning Systems Wi-Fi Fingerprinting Wi-Fi Triangulation Ekahau’s RTLS Patient Flow Monitoring Conclusion
  3. Introduction Wireless technologies used in healthcare WiMAX, WLAN, WPAN, WBAN, RFID Monitoring bodily functions ECG, blood oxygen level, blood glucose, coagulation, body weight, heart rate, EMG, oxygen saturation, etc. Accessing information wirelessly Entering information wirelessly Monitoring movement of entities
  4. WiMAX Strong security wireless data transmission Long distance range -> up to 50km High data rate -> up to 70Mbps High mobile capacity -> up to 150 km/h Great choice for telemedicine Image transfer Strong QoS framework Prehospital management systems
  5. WLAN Standard IEEE 802.11 which is well developed Transmission of media Communication between hospital departments or hospital to hospital Transfer of patient data around the hospital Used widely in telemedicine andhealthcare data transmission
  6. WPAN WPANs are mostly used for continuous patient monitoring and wireless-integrated medical devices Bluetooth has been popularized by Ericsson Bluetooth has been designed for cable replacement and short distance ad-hoc connectivity Zigbee is an ultra-low power and low data rate technology Zigbee for monitoring and controlling applications
  7. WBAN Zigbee or UWB standard For low-power integrated circuits, wireless communications, and sensors Goal is a body integratable network Used for computer-assisted rehabilitation
  8. RFID As seen in class Used to monitor entities like patients or equipment Can be used to keep track of inventory but also positioning Can act as sensors (vital signs)
  9. Wi-Fi Fingerprinting Involves taking measurements at key places to fingerprint each location Measurement of 4 orientations or more is suggested for every measured location for better results M. Quan, E. Navarro, and B. Peuker, "Wi-Fi localization using RSSI fingerprinting," 2010.
  10. Wi-Fi Triangulation Use of the (RSSI) received signal strength intensityof three access points Used to find the incenter of the triangle which indicates the position of the entity to locate Theoretically very precise but in practice, signal measurements are very noisy Needs at least three signals
  11. What is an RTLS? Real-time location system System in which tagged entities, for example by RFID tags, continuously transmit their location Needs transmitters and receivers Transmitters are on the entities that need to be tracked Receivers are throughout the place in which the entities need to be tracked The location of the entities can be determined by the system according to its own algorithm
  12. Ekahau’s RTLS Uses RFID over Wi-Fi Uses established methods like fingerprinting and triangulation Integrates probabilities instead of deterministic values by assuming that measured values are noisy Model is based on Bayes theorem where P(L|O) is the probability of observing said entity at location L:
  13. Ekahau’s RTLS (cont.) Constructs area-specific Positioning Model Each sample point has its own received signal strength intensity (RSSI) Establishes legal and illegal paths Navigation routes are embedded RSSIs are normalized and errors are minimized by Ekahau’s own algorithm
  14. Ekahau’s RTLS (cont.) Access points are used to improve the estimates of the entities’ lcoations The greater the number of overlapping access points, the better the measurements “Dummy” access points can be used to improve the location estimation Although it uses the existing Wi-Fi infrastructure, the RTLS should not affect the network’s traffic http://www.enterprisenetworkingplanet.com/netsysm/article.php/3893301/Free-WiFi-Stumblers-Do-the-Work-But-Save-You-Money.htm
  15. Patient Flow Monitoring Integrate RTLS and Business Process Management Technology to monitor service time and wait times in a Care process (clinical pathway) e.g. a heart attack patient arrives in ER, and the steps followed to arrive at “balloon” operation to save the patient and eventually lead to discharge Track location information using wireless smart sensors Receive events from BPM to know what the next step in the care process is
  16. Architecture Ekahau’s RTLS + iPads+ IBM BPM and CEP
  17. Complex Event Processing (CEP) CEP lets us infer complex events by correlating the location and business process events received Patient Flow Monitoring used an algorithm based on rules that depended on the order of the events processed to determine patient flow through a care process A state-based algorithm has been developed to follow a process based on service states and wait states to simplify the processing of events and optimize patient flow monitoring
  18. References L. Peyton, A. Mouttham, K.A. Ali, A. Baarah, H.T. Mouftah, “Real-time Analytics and Quality of Care”, Handbook on Systems and Complexity in Health. Springer, pp 495-519, 2013. S. Baffoe, A. Baarah, L.Peyton, “Inferring State for Real-Time Monitoring of Care Processes”, Software Engineering in Healthcare, San Francisco,2013 Aladdin Baarah, "An Application Framework for Monitoring Care Processes“, PhD Thesis, 2013. Renaud T. Bougueng, "Location-Aware Business Process Management for Real-time Monitoring of Patient Care Processes“, M.Sc. Thesis, 2013.
  19. Patient Flow Monitoring (events)
  20. Cardiac Care Process (State Model)
  21. Rule Patient State Mapping
  22. Rules Algorithm vs State Algorithm Events are triggered via monitoring done by the wireless devices
  23. Healthcare Application Inferred Rules By tracking movement, it is possible to infer some events Permits tracking times By tracking times and movements, and recording when they occur, it is possible to make an analysisand determine where the process needs to beimproved
  24. Care Process Monitoring Dashboard
  25. Conclusion RTLSs are very useful for areas like healthcare monitoring Location algorithms can still be improved There is great potential for these kinds of systems to improve current processes
  26. Question 1 – Triangulation (1/3) K Triangulation is one of the basic methods used to localize an object indoor. In the diagram above, assuming that R, S, and T represent routers or access points and that the lines coming from R, S, and T are the received signal strengths, what steps do we have to follow to find the (x,y) coordinates of K (the location we are trying to find) ? Use the diagram above and the equations to help you describe the steps needed and the resulting equations.
  27. Question 1 – Triangulation (2/3) K Answer: To find the coordinates of K we have to: Find the equation of each line of received signal strength. (A line can be symbolized by the equation y = mx + b where m is the slope and b is the y-intercept of the line) The slope of the line and the y-intercept can be found using the angles given by the received signal strengths to the routers and the coordinates. Using the line equations, we can determine the coordinates of A, B, and C by using simple substitution of the intersecting lines for each point.
  28. Question 1 – Triangulation (3/3) K Answer: To find the coordinates of K we have to: (cont.) With the coordinates of A, B, and C, and Pythagoras’ theorem, we can find the lengths of AB, BC, and AC. With the lengths of AB, BC, and AC, as well as the coordinates of A, B, and C, we can apply the equations above to find the incenter of the triangle which is the coordinates ofK.
  29. Question 2 – Rules vs States In healthcare, it is useful to monitor events in order to gather metrics and analyze them. Two algorithms were presented to monitor processes and know at which stage they are: an algorithm based on rules, and an algorithm based on states. Why is an algorithm based on states better than an algorithm based on rules when considering flexibility? Answer: An algorithm based on states is better because it is easier to add, modify, or remove events on which states might be dependent on. In the rules algorithm, this would imply the modification of several rules and a much higher complexity than the states algorithm.
  30. Question 3 – Hospital Monitoring Ekahau is a real-time location system(RTLS) that uses several methods to monitor events. An RTLS in a hospital is interesting because we can gather important metrics from it and execute an analysis to see where the gaps are. Why does the Ekahau RTLS uses probabilistic values instead of deterministic values in their algorithms? How is that reflected in a hospital’s environment? Answer: Ekahau uses probabilistic values because measurements are noisy and depend on the environment. This is reflected in a hospital’s environment due to the traffic, the various equipment they use, the hospital’s layout etc.
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