Title: Connecting Lives Adding Mobility to Healthcare
1Connecting Lives Adding Mobility to Healthcare
- Abdullah Al-Kaabi
- Chief Operating Officer
2Agenda
- Using the mobile phone as a medic to benefit
patients, doctors, care givers, hospitals and
governments - Remote patient monitoring for chronic illnesses
- Advances in body area networks (BAN) and the
applications - MobiCare Makes better economic sense
3Trends in web health
4Growing dependency of healthcare seekers on the
internet
5Cost of Chronic Diseases on Productivity
control
6The mobile phone the future all-in-one medical
device
- Trauma Care
- For hospital workers on the move
- For home care workers
- During short-term follow-up on acute cases
- In long-term monitoring of chronic diseases
- Cardiac monitoring
- Diabetes
- Blood Pressure
- Pregnancy
- For the supervision of critically ill patients
7Pulse Monitoring ICU on Mobile
8An Emergency Scenario
SOS - DOC
CALL
TRANSFER
TRANSFER
9Telemedicine - Teleradiology
10Long-term monitoring of diabetes
11MobiCare Functional Architecture
Applications Cardio, Diabees, Pregnancy
Mobile-Radiology, Imaging, ECG/EEG
MobiCare Service Layer
Wearable Bio-Sensors
BAN Communications Layer
Private BAN - Layer
Hospital / Healthcare Providers
Sensors
12BAN Body Area Networks
13Introduction
- Body area sensors can enable novel applications
in and beyond healthcare, but research must
address obstacles such as size, cost,
compatibility, and perceived value before
networks that use such sensors can become
widespread.
14A Typical BAN Architecture
15Requirements
- Value. Perceived value can depend on many
factors, such as assessment ability, but overall,
the BASN must improve its users quality of life. - Safety. Wearable and implanted sensors will need
to be biocompatible and unobtrusive to prevent
harm to the user. - Safety-critical applications must have
fault-tolerantoperation. - Security. Unauthorized access or manipulation of
system function could have severe consequences.
Security measures such as user authentication
will prevent such consequences. - Privacy. BASNs will be entrusted with potentially
sensitive information about people. Protecting
user privacy will require both technical and
nontechnical solutions. BASN packaging will need
to be inconspicuous to avoid drawing attention to
medical conditions. Encryption will be necessary
to protect sensitive data, and encryption
mechanisms will need to be resource-aware. - Compatibility. BASN nodes need to interoperate
with other BASN nodes, existing inter-BASN
networks, and even with electronic health record
systems. This will require standardization of
communication protocols and data storage formats. - Ease of use. Wearable BASN nodes will need to be
small, unobtrusive, ergonomic, easy to put on,
few in number, and even stylish. On-body and
off-body user interfaces will need intuitive
controls and presentation of information.
16Connecting Lives
Makes better economic sense
17Mobicare - Ecosystem
18Better Economic Sense
Average Cost of health care per week when
hospitalized USD 100
Average Cost of healthcare per week when in a
nursing home USD 600
Average Cost of healthcare per week when in a own
home USD 200
19Hospitals in Germany can save up to 1.5 bil per
yearthrough early discharge of patients made
possible bymobile monitoring services
20(No Transcript)
21Q A