DocumentCode :
2938702
Title :
Telemedicine enabled remote critical care ventilator
Author :
Seifert, Gregory J. ; Hedin, Daniel S. ; Dahlstrom, Robert J. ; Havey, Gary D.
Author_Institution :
Adv. Med. Electron., Maple Grove, MN, USA
fYear :
2010
fDate :
Aug. 31 2010-Sept. 4 2010
Firstpage :
1150
Lastpage :
1153
Abstract :
Following a critical illness, technology-dependent children on chronic ventilator support require specialized care to facilitate recovery and rehabilitation that minimally impedes social and psychological development. Intervention strategies have been confounded by the need for frequent assessment via physical exam in a relatively immobile patient population. The availability of technology that enables effective, timely, and reliable information transfer between the homecare providers and the attending pulmonologist is likely to decrease the need for transport and hospitalization, and provide a dramatically increased level of comfort for care givers in the home and ultimately the children. A Pulmonetic Systems LTV 1200 ventilator was enabled with a wireless cellular interface to make its settings and performance data real-time accessible over a secure wireless Internet connection. A complete web-browser ventilator interface program was specified, coded, and tested. The live web interface was used to support a formal survey of pediatric pulmonologists to help gauge the potential medical utility of the new remote interface to the ventilator. The survey results were overwhelmingly supportive of the concept, and the pulmonologists listed many varied ways that the data could have utility in their patient populations.
Keywords :
Internet; biomedical equipment; medical control systems; online front-ends; paediatrics; patient care; patient rehabilitation; telemedicine; user interfaces; Pulmonetic Systems LTV 1200 ventilator; child psychological development; child social development; chronic ventilator support; complete web browser ventilator interface program; homecare; live web interface; patient recovery; patient rehabilitation; pediatric pulmonologists; secure wireless Internet connection; specialized care; technology dependent children; telemedicine enabled remote critical care ventilator; wireless cellular interface; Browsers; Monitoring; Pediatrics; Web server; Cellular Phone; Child; Critical Care; Humans; Minnesota; Respiration, Artificial; Telemedicine; Telemetry; Therapy, Computer-Assisted; User-Computer Interface;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2010 Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Buenos Aires
ISSN :
1557-170X
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-4123-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/IEMBS.2010.5627146
Filename :
5627146
Link To Document :
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