DocumentCode :
3564494
Title :
RIPPLE: Scalable medical telemetry system for supporting combat rescue
Author :
Renner, Adam ; Williams, Robert ; McCartney, Matthew ; Harmon, Brandon ; Boswell, Lucas ; Ganapathy, Subhashini ; Abhyankar, Kushal ; West, James ; Weiner, Nir ; Weinle, Nathan
Author_Institution :
U.S. Air Force Res. Lab., Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, USA
fYear :
2014
Firstpage :
228
Lastpage :
232
Abstract :
Emergency response operations would universally benefit by extending telemedicine to the most difficult and challenging environments. For example, the Air Force Pararescue Jumpers (PJ) and Combat Rescue Officers (CRO) perform rescue and life-saving measure in austere environments. Currently, Bluetooth® aided pen-and-paper systems are employed to collect and store medical data, from the time it is sensed to its dissemination. This is proving to be tedious and non-scalable, especially when the number of casualties is larger than the number of responders in a given mission. Pararescue Jumpers, Combat Rescue Officers and similar medical rescue agencies are seeking medical vital sign sensors and telemetry solutions for mass casualty responses in which a small team of medical rescuers must be able to rescue and sustain the life of multiple casualties in critical condition. Project Ripple, to be described in this paper, is meant to create a Medical Body Area Network (MBAN) of sensors to assist in triage and general physiological data collection in a disaster scenario. The system is demonstrates an improved alternative to existing Bluetooth® and pen-and-paper systems by streamlining the processes of data collection, storage, transfer, and visualization. Low-power, wireless devices that utilized open standards makeup the sensor network while custom mobile applications were used for the visualization of the sensor data. Also, flexible and generic sensor fusion architecture is being explored.
Keywords :
Bluetooth; biomedical telemetry; body area networks; body sensor networks; data visualisation; emergency management; information dissemination; sensor fusion; telemedicine; Air Force Pararescue Jumpers; Bluetooth; Combat Rescue Officers; Project Ripple; austere environments; data collection process; data storage process; data transfer process; disaster scenario; emergency response operations; flexible sensor fusion; general physiological data collection; generic sensor fusion architecture; medical body area network; medical data collection; medical rescue agencies; medical vital sign sensors; pen-and-paper system; scalable medical telemetry system; sensor MBAN; sensor data visualization process; sensor network; store medical data; supporting combat rescue; telemedicine; telemetry solutions; wireless devices; Biomedical monitoring; Computer architecture; IEEE 802.15 Standards; Monitoring; Sensors; Wireless communication; Wireless sensor networks; MBAN; pararescue; sensor fusion;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Aerospace and Electronics Conference, NAECON 2014 - IEEE National
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-4690-7
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/NAECON.2014.7045807
Filename :
7045807
Link To Document :
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