DocumentCode
1615230
Title
The Trauma Patient Tracking System: implementing a wireless monitoring infrastructure for emergency response
Author
Maltz, Jonathan S. ; Ng, Thomas S C ; Li, Dustin J. ; Wang, Jian ; Wang, Kang ; Bergeron, William ; Martin, Ron ; Budinger, Thomas F.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Functional Imaging, California Univ., Berkeley, CA
fYear
2006
Firstpage
2441
Lastpage
2446
Abstract
In mass trauma situations, emergency personnel are challenged with the task of prioritizing the care of many injured victims. We propose a trauma patient tracking system (TPTS) where first-responders tag all patients with a wireless monitoring device that continuously reports the location of each patient. The system can be used not only to prioritize patient care, but also to determine the time taken for each patient to receive treatment. This is important in training emergency personnel and in identifying bottlenecks in the disaster response process. In situations where biochemical agents are involved, a TPTS may be employed to determine sites of cross-contamination. In order to track patient location in both outdoor and indoor environments, we employ both global positioning system (GPS) and television/radio frequency (TVRF) technologies. Each patient tag employs IEEE 802.11 (Wi-Fi)/TCP/IP networking to communicate with a central server via any available Wi-Fi basestation. A key component to increase TPTS fault-tolerance is a mobile Wi-Fi basestation that employs redundant Internet connectivity to ensure that tags at the disaster scene can send information to the central server even when local infrastructure is unavailable for use. We demonstrate the robustness of the system in tracking multiple patients in a simulated trauma situation in an urban environment
Keywords
Global Positioning System; IEEE standards; Internet; emergency services; patient monitoring; tracking; IEEE 802.11/TCP/IP networking; Internet connectivity; Wi-Fi basestation; emergency personnel; global positioning system; patient care; patient tracking; television/radio frequency technologies; trauma; wireless monitoring; Global Positioning System; Indoor environments; Medical treatment; Network servers; Patient monitoring; Personnel; Radio frequency; Radiofrequency identification; TV; Web server; biomonitoring; emergency; trauma; wireless monitoring;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2005. IEEE-EMBS 2005. 27th Annual International Conference of the
Conference_Location
Shanghai
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8741-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IEMBS.2005.1616962
Filename
1616962
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