Close
  • Latest News
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Video
  • Big Data and Analytics
  • Cloud
  • Networking
  • Cybersecurity
  • Applications
  • IT Management
  • Storage
  • Sponsored
  • Mobile
  • Small Business
  • Development
  • Database
  • Servers
  • Android
  • Apple
  • Innovation
  • Blogs
  • PC Hardware
  • Reviews
  • Search Engines
  • Virtualization
Read Down
Sign in
Close
Welcome!Log into your account
Forgot your password?
Read Down
Password recovery
Recover your password
Close
Search
Logo
Logo
  • Latest News
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Video
  • Big Data and Analytics
  • Cloud
  • Networking
  • Cybersecurity
  • Applications
  • IT Management
  • Storage
  • Sponsored
  • Mobile
  • Small Business
  • Development
  • Database
  • Servers
  • Android
  • Apple
  • Innovation
  • Blogs
  • PC Hardware
  • Reviews
  • Search Engines
  • Virtualization
More
    Home Latest News

      Boston Hospital Uses Ultrasound to Track Patients

      Written by

      Evan Schuman
      Published March 11, 2006
      Share
      Facebook
      Twitter
      Linkedin

        eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More.

        When Brigham and Womens Hospital in Boston needed to find a better way to track emergency room patients, they wanted to use RFID. But they ran into a wall. Literally.

        It seems that the radio frequency approach was able to triangulate the position of patients by distance, but not by room. It wouldnt recognize walls so it couldnt identify rooms.

        Working with a grant from the National Library of Medicine, hospital officials started experimenting with a technology their maternity wards were already quite familiar with: ultrasound.

        A modified version of the same technology that lets first-trimester parents see their yet-to-be-born baby is being used to address the hospitals need for a patient-tracking system.

        That need was initially envisioned for catastrophic situations—a Katrina-level natural disaster or a 9/11-level terrorist attack—where a hospital would quickly get flooded with patients on little notice.

        As patients are moved from waiting rooms to various triage centers to makeshift patient rooms and operating rooms, its easy for a hectic hospital to lose track of some.

        But Dr. Tom Stair, an attending physician in Brigham and Womens emergency department and one of the physicians in charge of the patient-tracking project (called SMART, standing for Scalable Medical Alert and Response Technology), quickly concluded that such capabilities need not be limited to large-scale disasters.

        “This happens on a smaller scale almost every afternoon,” he said, pointing out that the hospitals emergency room has space for 44 patients. “Almost every single day, we go beyond that and start losing medical records and losing track of patients.”

        For practical business issues, giving the emergency room more space is not a likely option. The emergency room “doesnt generate that much money for the hospital, so they dont want us to grow that much,” Stair said.

        The need for creative approaches for tracking patients quickly is exacerbated by the realities of 21st century hospital management.

        “The surge capacity that used to be here [in Boston] is gone,” Stair said. “There used to be lots of empty hospital beds sitting around” but hospital closings have changed much of that.

        “In the interest of economy, we have made it all go away.”

        Indeed, for potential emergencies, Stairs team has been looking at those closed hospitals as emergency overflow locations.

        The hospitals experimental system consists of a small fannypack with a Hewlett-Packard iPAQ handheld running Linux. Four cables come out of the pack and are attached to the patient: three are glued to the patients chest and one is clipped to the finger.

        /zimages/1/28571.gifWill hospitals truly move ahead with electronic medical records this year? To find out, click here.

        This allows the hospital to both monitor the patients exact location—using a tracking device that Stair describes as looking like “a fat ballpoint pen”—as well as watch some vital signs, specifically cardiac rhythm and oxygen saturation.

        The systems intent is to start tracking patient location and condition immediately at the site of the emergency and continue ambulance transportation, triage and movement through multiple medical sites and eventually between rooms at the final facility.

        SMART, which is a collaboration between Brigham, the neighboring Harvard Medical School and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, coordinates all of that data and shares it across an 802.11b wireless network to the network server.

        Other iPAQs are used by hospital staff to monitor the results from the patient devices. “The PDA screen for the caregivers, it looks like a spreadsheet” and allows personnel to zoom in on any patient.

        When medical readings go beyond set limits, “it shows a color change and the thing will buzz and vibrate,” Stair said. “When somebody develops an abnormal heart rhythm, theres going to be an alarm.”

        Next Page: Ultrasound versus RFID.

        Ultrasound Versus RFID

        But the most challenging part was finding a way for precise patient location. “Most people use RFID for tracking like this, but ultrasound is very sensitive to walls, which is important for us,” Stair said.

        “If you use a radio-frequency transmitter and then a bunch of detectors that triangulate where something is, you can detect [the patient] a floor above or below. It cant detect if youre on one side of the wall.”

        The tracking device that Brigham is using comes from a Norway company called Sonitor Technologies.

        The system places specially-designed microphone detectors throughout rooms and hallways, said Sonitor CEO Terry Aasen. The detectors can detect and identify patient signals from a distance of 100 feet.

        The signals is at a frequency too high to be heard by humans and is similar to the sonar system used by bats. The signals use MFSK (Multiple Frequency Shift Keying) to differentiate the sounds emitted to identify different patients.

        The shorter the distance, the more precise the system will be, Aasen said, but 100 feet is a safe distance. “At that length, youre depending on echos and other things in the room,” he said.

        The system can detect whether there is even slight movement from a patient and it responds by sending out a tone that is detected by the nearest microphone.

        “Within the tag, there is an extremely sensitive motion detector. Movement wakes up the item,” Aasen said.

        Brigham has been testing the system on “healthy volunteers” for about three months with ten of the kits, Stair said.

        “Right now, we only have [tracking] beacons halfway around the lobby. We can tell if they went to the coffee shop,” he said.

        /zimages/1/28571.gifTo read about the RFID hype effect, click here.

        Stair said it was difficult to project the eventual cost of such a system when deployed. Initial costs include about $800 for each iPAQ (one stays with the patient while others are used by staff to see the monitoring results), $10 for each lead, $30 for each position sensor and about $60 for each of five Wi-Fi access points.

        “But the cost of putting it all together and creating the homegrown software, that I cant calculate,” Stair said, but added that the grant-funded three years of development cost “about a million dollars. Theres a lot of engineering time and a lot of expensive professionals.”

        The ER physician said he saw a particularly effective use for the SMART system when he volunteered in New Orleans to help with Katrina emergency medical care.

        “They turned the basketball arena at LSU [Louisiana State University] into a field hospital. There were stretchers set all around,” he said. The potential of losing track of the many patients flowing in and out of that makeshift medical center was huge, he said.

        Retail Center Editor Evan Schuman can be reached at Evan_Schuman@ziffdavis.com.

        /zimages/1/28571.gifCheck out eWEEK.coms for the latest news, views and analysis on technologys impact on retail.

        Evan Schuman
        Evan Schuman
        Evan Schuman is the editor of CIOInsight.com's Retail industry center. He has covered retail technology issues since 1988 for Ziff-Davis, CMP Media, IDG, Penton, Lebhar-Friedman, VNU, BusinessWeek, Business 2.0 and United Press International, among others.

        Get the Free Newsletter!

        Subscribe to Daily Tech Insider for top news, trends & analysis

        Get the Free Newsletter!

        Subscribe to Daily Tech Insider for top news, trends & analysis

        MOST POPULAR ARTICLES

        Artificial Intelligence

        9 Best AI 3D Generators You Need...

        Sam Rinko - June 25, 2024 0
        AI 3D Generators are powerful tools for many different industries. Discover the best AI 3D Generators, and learn which is best for your specific use case.
        Read more
        Cloud

        RingCentral Expands Its Collaboration Platform

        Zeus Kerravala - November 22, 2023 0
        RingCentral adds AI-enabled contact center and hybrid event products to its suite of collaboration services.
        Read more
        Artificial Intelligence

        8 Best AI Data Analytics Software &...

        Aminu Abdullahi - January 18, 2024 0
        Learn the top AI data analytics software to use. Compare AI data analytics solutions & features to make the best choice for your business.
        Read more
        Latest News

        Zeus Kerravala on Networking: Multicloud, 5G, and...

        James Maguire - December 16, 2022 0
        I spoke with Zeus Kerravala, industry analyst at ZK Research, about the rapid changes in enterprise networking, as tech advances and digital transformation prompt...
        Read more
        Video

        Datadog President Amit Agarwal on Trends in...

        James Maguire - November 11, 2022 0
        I spoke with Amit Agarwal, President of Datadog, about infrastructure observability, from current trends to key challenges to the future of this rapidly growing...
        Read more
        Logo

        eWeek has the latest technology news and analysis, buying guides, and product reviews for IT professionals and technology buyers. The site’s focus is on innovative solutions and covering in-depth technical content. eWeek stays on the cutting edge of technology news and IT trends through interviews and expert analysis. Gain insight from top innovators and thought leaders in the fields of IT, business, enterprise software, startups, and more.

        Facebook
        Linkedin
        RSS
        Twitter
        Youtube

        Advertisers

        Advertise with TechnologyAdvice on eWeek and our other IT-focused platforms.

        Advertise with Us

        Menu

        • About eWeek
        • Subscribe to our Newsletter
        • Latest News

        Our Brands

        • Privacy Policy
        • Terms
        • About
        • Contact
        • Advertise
        • Sitemap
        • California – Do Not Sell My Information

        Property of TechnologyAdvice.
        © 2024 TechnologyAdvice. All Rights Reserved

        Advertiser Disclosure: Some of the products that appear on this site are from companies from which TechnologyAdvice receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site including, for example, the order in which they appear. TechnologyAdvice does not include all companies or all types of products available in the marketplace.

        ×