Taking Care of Mobile Patients 105
Roland Piquepaille writes "After a patient has been hospitalized for a surgical intervention, he usually wants to return to his normal life. But doctors would like to monitor him to be sure that the operation was successful. How can they manage this without being too intrusive? In "Health Care Monitoring of Mobile Patients," Italian researchers offer a three-layer networking solution. First, a body area sensor network would continuously record your cardiac activity or your body temperature. A second level would involve a home sensor network, including for example a PC wirelessly receiving this information. Finally, this home network would be able to alert an hospital network if needed. Right now, this whole idea is at the proof-of-concept level, but it really looks promising."
Exactly What We Don't Need (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Exactly What We Dot Need (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Exactly What We Dot Need (Score:1)
Re:Exactly What We Don't Need (Score:3, Informative)
Where did they mention "diseases that should have been prevented"? They could be talking about surgery for broken bones, gall stones, appendectomies, or whatever ... you leapt to the conclusion that it would be a "lifestyle" disease.
Re:Exactly What We Don't Need (Score:1)
However, they're having a hard time keeping the overweight family of 4 who you run into at Wal-Mart from eating all those Ho-Ho's and Ding-Dongs between feedings.
Re:Exactly What We Don't Need (Score:2)
What exactly would we do with more money in these programs? We already have ad campaigns and school programs that deal with these issues, other than hiring personal trainers for everyone, what would the money be used for? You can't just throw money at problems and hope they disappear.
Re:Exactly What We Don't Need (Score:2)
(besides. even if you had a healthy life you would get diseases, just maybe a bit later, or with bad luck earlier. it's not like you live forever with good diet and exercise - you'll still eventually get some disease that gets the best of you. unless of course you die by some other means)
so mr. anon cow. please retain from any hightech medical nonsense so we can save some money when you die a bit earlier.
First Post! (Score:1, Funny)
Just wait (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Just wait (Score:2)
But what about all possible privacy and security issues? I mean, we're dealing with personal medical data here, and the sentence "A second level would involve a home sensor network, including for example a PC wirelessly receiving this information." was already enough to get me somewhat alarmed, thinking about all the possible viruses, troijans and such that would most likely have infected this said (most likely Windows) PC. Second, the sentence "Finally, this home network would be ab
Re:Just wait (Score:1)
If it's just your medical records....well then what exactly would you lose other than privacy as far as to what has ailed you in the past? Why should a hospital have to have your explicit consent to send your medical history to another hospital, or to a network of hospitals - assuming of course that they are only exchanging you
Re:Just wait (Score:2)
While it's not actually sending your medical history, the fact that it's sending anything at all gives away certain information about you, like "I might die soon so my employer might want to look at a replacement, or at least an excuse to fire me and keep the insurance premiums from going up more"
Re:Just wait (Score:2)
Also, if the system knows what is 'normal' it could send a single code telling the hospital everything is perfectly alright.
Still not sure about the trojans tho...
Oh Cool!!! (Score:3)
Re:Oh Cool!!! (Score:2)
Re:Similar to astronaut montioring (Score:5, Interesting)
Being aware of Apollo stuff and some successive stuff this is just a natural progression. The really good thing here would be to get the patient out of the hospital and away from all of those nasty germs growing in that germ factory called a hospital. Your health gets in greater danger the closer you get to a hospital. They are really dangerous. Just to clarify I am an RN and I do know what I am talking about.
Hospitals have a risk of infection that is horrid. The problem is population density. In a 100 bed hospital your chances of catching something there in 3 days is about 10% or less. If the hospital has 500 beds it is about 50% Don't even think of those 2000 or so bed hospitals! What is worse your risk is of really nasty (Germ Warfare types etc) bugs getting to you like MRSA and Hemolytic Strep etc.
The best thing we could do for public health in the USA is to reduce the size of our hospitals dramatically. Following right behind that we should for the exact same reasons cut down on the size of our schools and especially get rid of or reduce daycares!
Now that I have stepped on all of the politically correct toes.. Mods get a life if you disagree.
Re:Similar to astronaut montioring (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Similar to astronaut montioring (Score:2)
> Where did you get those numbers from? Roland? Fox?
BAD doctor! Stop bullying that nurse. Be humble.
The nurse is absolutely right. *Obviously*, increasing the density of sick people increases the risk of infection there. The CDC says as much:
The Impact of Hospital-Acquired Bloodstream Infections [cdc.gov]
Baseline Data
Population-based surveillance studies of nosocomial infections in U.S. hospitals indicate a 5% attack rate or incidence of 5 infections per
Re:Similar to astronaut montioring (Score:2)
AC said:
> The attack rate of hospital acquired bloodstream infections was 5%
> and they speculatae that it would grow to 10% in large hospital.
> This is quite a bit lower than the 50% infection rate mentioned in the parent.
Was the nurse speaking about bloodstream infections? No! The nurse said:
> > > > The problem is population density. In a 100 bed hospital
> > > > your chances of catching something
> BTW the 49.4% nu
About those numbers (Score:4, Interesting)
In my area MRSA is rampant out in the community... people walk in the door with MRSA abscesses and skin infections all the time... many of them are young people with no sick relatives who have never spent a day in a health-care facility.
Re:Similar to astronaut montioring (Score:1)
The most difficult part is geting sensor that are not in the way and can be left for a while. Also can be left to do the checking. Be nice to have a bed simular to Star Trek. Nothing really attached to the person. Have seen the start of this at one hospital. The mo
Re:Similar to astronaut montioring (Score:2)
In my community, MRSA makes up 50% of the outpatient wound cultures. It's pretty much everywhere at this point. More worrisome are things like a bad influenza strain. We just had a flu death in our hospital--30 year old otherwise healthy female. Now that's a scary bug!
Re:Similar to astronaut montioring (Score:2)
But but.. will the patient have to rig together an air scrubber with square bits that don't fit in round ones, held together with space duct-tape, on the doctor's instrusctions by telephone in case of respiratory problems?
-1 Roland (Score:5, Funny)
They better have rock-solid network security (Score:2, Funny)
TOO MUCH SLASHDOT (Score:4, Funny)
Ack - slashdot has turned me from a skeptic into a cynic.
I must sign off now, but of course I'll hit reload one last time just in case another interesting article has been posted. So yeah - I'll probably still be here in a our or so...
Patients, not patents (Score:1)
patient added to Two Year Transplant waiting list. (Score:2, Insightful)
Go on.. Eat that cheeseburger, fries and jumbo coke and sit on your butt all day.
Re:patient added to Two Year Transplant waiting li (Score:2)
don't you realise that no matter how healthy you live you will get some (semi)'lifestyle' disease sooner or later that kills you. because you won't live forever - you WILL have problems with your heart, lungs, brains, muscles or something else, regardless of how healthy you have lived(it might take some healthy years later than if you had eaten unhealthy.. but you wont live forever).
What about when the patient is not home (Score:5, Interesting)
- Cary
--Fairfax Underground [fairfaxunderground.com]: Where Fairfax County comes out to play
Re:What about when the patient is not home (Score:3, Insightful)
1) Signal availabilty: If you live in areas with poor or no reception you're out of luck. Also in larger-scale emergency situations cells have been known to be overloaded.
2) Reliability: Something like this needs to run 24/7 without a problem. Home networks can be hardened with good hardware and backup power sources. Accidentally breaking the phone goes from being a temporary nuisance to a possibly fatal mistake.
3) Cost: Even if it only takes 10 seconds to transmit the dat
Re:What about when the patient is not home (Score:1)
Re:What about when the patient is not home (Score:2)
Pulmonary Embolus (Score:1)
Re:Pulmonary Embolus (Score:1)
Although this is a far shot better than being sent home with no follow-up, it could also lead to a false sense of security - you just don't have stand-by nurses and operating theatres in your average home.
Encryption? (Score:1)
seriously though, how would they keep this data secure, especially with all of the HIPAA requirements these days
Yeah I can see the doctor's inbox: (Score:5, Funny)
From: superpenis@hotmail.com
Subject: MAKE YOUR PENIS HUGE!!!
From: viagra4cheap@someispinchina.cn
Subject: V14gra 4 cH4Ap
From: yourfriendjoe@spamhole.com
Subject: Jesus loves you you know!
From: cathy234@yahoo.com
Subject: Holy crap, check this out! [virus deleted]
From: hotsex12sdfsdf@bullcraponline.com
Subject: Te quiero much mi amor [virus deleted]
From: automated@healthmonitor.org
Subject: Pulse 0, patient dead
From: boss@hospital.org
Subject: WHY THE FUCK DIDN'T YOU DO SOMETHING?! YOU'RE SO FIRED!!!
Re:Yeah I can see the doctor's inbox: (Score:1)
However, I know that the organization I work for is not the current norm. This could potentially be a serious problem at other places which implement this.
Re:Yeah I can see the doctor's inbox: (Score:3, Funny)
Subject: MAKE YOUR PENIS HUGE!!!
Didn't you know that all doctors have access to secret penis-enlargement surgeries and drugs that are unavailable to mere mortals? (don't believe me? Watch late-night TV... if there's a conspiracy to keep effective weight-loss and cancer treatments from the general public, you just KNOW we're doing the same for our penis-enlargement treatments).
From: viagra4cheap@someispinchina.cn
Subject: V14gra 4 cH4Ap
Heh... One word: Samples.
Sorry to say this (Score:5, Interesting)
There is a human tendency to focus on the numbers; the objective things that we can quantify and measure. Unfortunately, numbers in medicine are fuzzy... they MUST be interpreted within the context of individual patient normals, and existing illness.
Here's a great example from my own experience (Disclaimer: I am a physician who works in Emergency Services). Home blood-pressure monitoring devices are widespread now, such that many patients maintain these devices in their own homes. I sometimes see a half-dozen patients a day who present because they got a "high" number on their blood pressure machine. These people are asymptomatic, have no signs of end-organ damage, but are concerned enough about the number to come to the ER. I usually explain the phenomenon of cerebral BP autoregulation to them, and tell them that they're actually in greater danger if I aggressively lower their high blood pressure than if we gradually lower it with some medication changes. They often leave, still anxious despite the reassurance... they're worried about that number... that concrete, objective, hard piece of data to which we're all taught to lend so much weight.
This is the problem with absolute numbers... they have to be interpreted by a clinician in the context of the individual patient. Gathering the numbers is easy... it's interpreting them that's the difficult and rate-limiting step. Every student is taugh early in training to "treat the patient, not the number." It's a cliche, but it contains a kernel of hard truth; one must recognize the importance of individualized treatment and interpretation.
This system seems like it gathers lots of data... I just wonder what they're going to do to interpret it.
Re:Sorry to say this (Score:2)
Those patients you mention *are* sick, they suffer from hypochondry. Yes, they do tend to clog up ERs, but on the other end, after one or two thorough physical examinations, they can be properly diagnosed and directed to a psychologist for treatment earlier than
More important: people vary (Score:3, Interesting)
For example - I always have a bitch of a time donating blood, because I usually run a little hot - 99.2 F. That's my normal temperature - and too many health professionals forget that the original studies that determined body temp were done in Celcius, and were accurate to a degree ( have you ever wondered why 98.6 F = 37.0 C? Because the measurement was done in Celcius first, then converted).
You have to have the background data - what is normal for the pati
Re:More important: people vary (Score:1)
Re:Sorry to say this (Score:3, Insightful)
I know exactly what you mean about these patients. The way I've started dealing with them is to take a piece of paper and draw a quick graph that shows
Re:Sorry to say this (Score:2)
Hmm, lives *have* been saved due to people being alerted by such home-based diagnosis units - these machines have a place. The correct way to combat the misinterpretation you mentioned of some limited data is to obtain better data and have better understanding all a
Re:Sorry to say this (Score:2)
Most ECG machines give you a "machine read" when they record a tracing... but it's very often incomplete/wrong. I don't know a single clinician who bases their treatment soley off th
Re:Sorry to say this (Score:2)
Yes, I know that. I have a Holter scheduled early next month.
> Holter monitors most certainly DO have a place... but again,
> they only record the ECG data (not BP) and some give you statistics;
I was surprised to learn it, but the GP who referred me to the cardiac specialists said these Holters record blood pressure too. I asked if this was based on some sort of automated inflation, deflation of some cuff at regular intervals, but my G
Another thought - metrology... (Score:2)
I have a thermometer at home (old-school, alcohol filled glass tube). I also have a sphygmomamometer (one of the old-school types - cuff, dial, stethoscope).
Now, if my thermometer shows me running a bit hot, or if my sphygmomamometer shows me running a bit high, am I going to get terribly excited?
No, because I have NO IDEA what the calibration states of those instruments are -
Isn't this just great! (Score:1)
Re:Isn't this just great! (Score:1)
Piquepaille (Score:1, Troll)
Just wondered... (Score:1)
Wait until your ISP hears about it (Score:5, Interesting)
ISPs are gonna love this. Suddenly your net connection is as critical as a phone connection. People will die when the net connection goes down. Suddenly telco 99.999% uptime looks small.
Even when the ISP doesn't care about you, their lawyers care because your heirs will have an easy suit if they can prove the network was down for even 30 seconds at about the time you died.
Geeks everywhere will rejoice if this happens after "fast enough" netconnections are rolled out. Suddenly the bandwidth we want will be legally 24x7, and an effective static ip address because 30 seconds is less than how long it can take to reconnect after a dhcp lease changes.
Re:Wait until your ISP hears about it (Score:1)
Well, no.
You know that combinations of words you have to agree to (by voice or signature) when you sign up for a net connection? It often states that there is no guarantee that the connection will be available at all times.
There goes the suit. And it should. If you want 100% uptime (hefty compensation when offline) you
Re:Wait until your ISP hears about it (Score:2)
Doesn't matter, the law trumps anything in a contract. The law will take very dimly to any contract that allows someone to die. In fact once this becomes common you can sue your ISP for downtime, despite that part of the contract.
Any judge who hears these words: "Your honor, they cannot know when my great aunt will come for a visit after surgery. Therefore they need to assume I always have someone visiting who needs a net connection." The judge is likely to find that the ISP must keep the net connec
Re:Wait until your ISP hears about it (Score:1)
In Sweden (where I live), this would probably not be possible. For example, it would be impossible for me to sue the seller of a microwave oven for not explicitly stating that it cannot be used to dry my cat. Heck, even if he tells me it can, I still would not be able to sue him.
People have to think for themselves sometimes.
Re:Wait until your ISP hears about it (Score:2)
Our system of laws makes it possible for the little guy to get his day in court. It is easily abused, but despite all the stories about abuse it isn't that bad in reality.
Personally I pity you, living in a country where a faceless company can kill someone though negligence and there is nothing you can do about it, just because your contract doesn't prohibit it. Though from what I know of Swedish law (very little) my guess is that your courts are more likely to take my side of the argument than our cour
Security ? (Score:2)
Man goes on subway to get lunch/groceries/whatever...
another man passes him in close proximity, takes reading, privacy invaded.
Re:Security ? (Score:2)
another man passes him in close proximity, takes reading, privacy invaded.
The smart sick person goes get lunch/groceries/whatever..., saves the tinfoil wrapping, puts it on head immediately, another man passes him in close proximity, takes no reading, privacy maintained!
Obligatory (Score:3, Funny)
It gives a whole new meaning to "blue screen of death"
Sorry...
Re:Obligatory (Score:1)
Re:Obligatory (Score:1)
Needless to say, I wrote this post in
Dr Clippy (Score:2)
Get them OUT of the hospital ASAP! (Score:4, Interesting)
Even if they only go to a convalescent care center, the faster they get out of the hospital and into a place that is more like a home envoronment, the better for all concerned. Hospitals are no place to try to rest and recover from anything (and I speak as an ex-Med Tech).
Being able to monitor blood pressure, temp and pulse, perhaps with a "store and send" technology, would be a big step, because the firsat sign of a complicating infection is usually shown when one or more of the three goes off the patient's usual pattern.
Brave new world. (Score:5, Interesting)
Sensor modules are located in the appropriate places - cardiac, temperature, blood oxygen level - all connected by bluetooth to the hub of your Body Sensor Suite - your cell phone. The phone stores 2 hours worth of telemetry at the maximum collection rate. It runs the input data through gates, constantly checking for pre-loaded alert triggers. If it detects a problem it can react with a variety of responses, from warning you in a kindly caretaker voice (maybe recorded messages from your 3 daughters) to take it easy, activating a medpak release, automatically connecting with your doctors office, up to sending a mayday on the 911 channel with automatic integration to the nearest EMT unit. The EMTs and your doctor receive real time sensor feeds as well as a GPS upload from your phone. Your doctor can remote activate medpaks, adjust your pacemaker, or use your phones camera to check pupil dilation. The EMTs have your complete medical history as well as treatment instructions from your doctor before they reach the scene. Your phone handshakes with the infotags embedded in the EMT's drug deliver system - verifying doses and checking for allergies.
If you don't have any problems every two hours your phone links with your PC at home. Data is downloaded. Your complete records are available to your doctor (or his Virtual Physicians Assistant) via internet. He can monitor trends and modify the alert trips and actions. These new settings are uploaded to your phone during regular updates. Lifestyle information linking time, place, and physical condition are available for diagnostic evaluation. Your phone calls you and says "you are entering the first phase of an allergic reaction, what are you touching?" Sensors are available for environmental contaminants, radiation, air quality, even electromagnetic and sonic energy. Your phone won't let you drive drunk or fall asleep at the wheel. There's a hack available that masks cannabis detection. There's a lot of hacks available - recreational, performance enhancing, popular supplements. To refill your medpaks you just insert them into the AutoScript at your favorite store - yes - hacks are available. Of course if your phone indicates you have been deviating from your doctor prescribed regimen your co-pays go up. And there is that nasty rumor about the NSA...
And of course.....it runs linex.
And The 4th Part (Score:3, Funny)
Dick Cheney (Score:2, Funny)
It's been done. Devices are on patients now. (Score:3, Informative)
The belt-worn unit, running VxWorks, continuously analyzes the waveform, comparing results with physician-defined thresholds. When a threshold is exceeded the unit communicates with the monitoring center using it's built-in cell phone. It the patient is outside, the built-in GPS tells the ambulance where to find him/her. The monitoring center can contact the physician. The system is in active use today in Philadelphia.
from the summery (Score:1)
Step 1: No rectal thermometers at work.
Uh Oh,,, (Score:1)
Not new (Score:1)
Brings new meaning too (Score:2)
I though the idea was (Score:3, Insightful)
Can't people take a day or two off for a triple bypass anymore? IT isn't like you are isolated from the world. Many hosipitals now have computer terminals that you can use, and free WiFi if you want to use your own. Not to mention telephones.
Bad idea from experience (Score:3, Informative)
I think wireless transmission to the hospital would be a bad idea for the following reasons: