DocumentCode
186252
Title
Using a real-time operating system for multitasking in Remote Patient Monitoring
Author
Rockwood, Michael ; Joshi, Vinayak ; Sullivan, K. ; Goubran, Rafik
Author_Institution
Dept. of Syst. & Comput. Eng., Carleton Univ., Ottawa, ON, Canada
fYear
2014
fDate
11-12 June 2014
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
5
Abstract
Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM) systems will play an important role in the future of healthcare. They will be used to monitor chronic conditions, but may also be employed to detect acute medical conditions and generate alarms in real-time. This real-time responsiveness is a critical design criterion for acute condition detection. The data rate of each sensor represents a hard real-time threshold; if an RPM system cannot process incoming data as quickly as it arrives, its perception of a patient´s health status will gradually begin to lag behind that patient´s actual status. One effective way to address this issue is to select an operating system (OS) that can effectively manage data analysis for the highest priority tasks under all possible CPU load conditions. This paper evaluates the performance of a real-time operating system (RTOS)-based multi-sensor RPM system. The real-time system performance is measured against a hard realtime processing threshold for five simulated sensor inputs with varying priority levels. The results demonstrate that preemptive scheduling, employed by the RTOS, allows an RPM system under heavy processing load to consistently meet the hard real-time threshold requirements for acute condition detection.
Keywords
health care; medical computing; operating systems (computers); patient monitoring; real-time systems; scheduling; RPM; healthcare; real-time operating system; remote patient monitoring; Biomedical monitoring; Electrocardiography; Instruction sets; Operating systems; Patient monitoring; Real-time systems; Remote patient monitoring; real time operating system; sensor network;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Medical Measurements and Applications (MeMeA), 2014 IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location
Lisboa
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-2920-7
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/MeMeA.2014.6860109
Filename
6860109
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