Title: Prevailing over Wires in Healthcare Environments: Benefits and Challenges
1Prevailing over Wires in Healthcare Environments
Benefits and Challenges
- Authors David Cypher, Nicolas Chevrollier,
Nicolas Montavont, and Nada Golmie - Presentation by Mohamad Chaarawi
- COSC 7388 Advanced Distributed Computing
2Introduction
- Wireless technologies spreading in healthcare
environments - Need a reliable connection especially in this
kind of environment - Cost effectiveness
- Universal interface for wireless communication
3Wireless over Wires?
- Cost and time of Wiring
- Mobility
- Interoperability
- Patient comfort
- Ubiquitous connectivity
4Topology
5Outline
- Healthcare applications
- User case
- Wireless technologies
- Deployment
- Interference
- Moving between APs
- Summary
6Universal Standard
- Development of a specification for wireless
universal and interoperable interface
communication - Transparent
- Easy to use
- Quicky (re)configurable
- Not starting from scratch
- IEEE 802 Local Area Network/Metro Area Network
standards organization
7Healthcare Applications (I)
- Requirements
- Reliable connectivity
- Timeliness and integrity of information
- BW, delay, loss
- Different medical applications will use different
wireless technologies
8Healthcare Applications (II)
Medical Data
General purpose
9Wireless Technologies
- Standards developed by IEEE 802.
- WLAN (IEEE 802.11) uses a single media access
control (MAC) sublayer with many different
physical layers (a/b). - WPAN each defines its MAC sublayer and physical
layers. - IEEE 802.15.1 includes layers of the Bluetooth
specification - IEEE 802.15.4 designed for low data rates, low
power consumption, and low usage applications
10Electrocardiogram (ECG)
- Records electrical signals from the heart
- Continuous signals
- Must be sampled to be digitized (important for
choosing the traffic characteristics of the
transport) - For Example we have 500 samples/s and sample
size is 8 bits, this means that the data traffic
requirement is 4000 bits/s
11Heart to Digital
12Wireless Technologies
13Packetization
- The pairing focuses on packetization (framing and
the sample accumulation delay). - Considering just the data traffic requirement,
the 802.15.4 is the most appropriate
14Medium Access
- Need to consider the method that contributes to
the end-to-end delay - 802.15.4 uses CSMA/CA which produces a random
access delay for each frame. - Analysis of the ECG shows that the medium access
delay ranges from 1.024 to 5.216 ms, as the
number of samples per frame varies from 1 to 118
(max payload)
15Data Service
- ECG application is more sensitive to time delays
than to packet loss. - IEEE 802.15.4 offers both unacknowledged and
acknowledged which contribute to delay and
overhead, so unacknowledged data service is used
in our case.
16Deployment issues (I)
- Several issues need to be considered for
deployment - Coverage Area
- Network Architecture
- Frequency Allocation
- Output power
17Deployment issues (II)
- ECG leads on the patients body collect the
medical data that is displayed on a monitor
nearby. This data also is transmitted to a remote
station. - Movement of the patient between rooms should not
break the communication.
18Coverage Area (I)
- Coverage areas vary between
- Body area (lt 1m)
- Personal area (lt 10m)
- Local area (lt 100m)
- Wide area (gt 100m)
- 802.15 designed for personal area and 802.11 for
local area.
19Coverage Area (II)
- Coverage areas vary widely based on radio
frequency used and the physical environment. - For the personal area, the signal can be
constrained within a limited area, while for
local area larger distances need to be covered. - Since the ECGs communication devices are close to
each other, a personal area network (802.15.4)
can be used. - But to communicate with remote stations, a local
area network is needed.
20Network Architecture
- Wireless technologies are designed with
- Infrastructure mode assumes a fixed AP, which
attaches to the established network and thus
provides a communication portal for stations in
the APs range. - Ad hoc mode permits devices to communicate with
other peer devices dynamically (802.15). Quick
deployment is an advantage but Radio Frequency
management can be a problem. - For the ECG, Ad hoc mode is more appropriate.
21Frequency Allocations (I)
- Radio frequency (RF) spectrum (3 kHz 300 GHz)
- In the US, the Federal Communications Commission
(FCC) divides it into many usage bands. - Bands for medical usage include (ISM)
- Industry
- Scientific
- Medical
- Those bands are shared however with other users.
22Frequency Allocations (II)
- Need to select first which ISM band to use.
- All three wireless technologies use the 2400 MHz
band. 802.11a and 802.15.4 have other channels in
some bands that can be used in case the 2400 MHz
band is overcrowded. - Next step How the band is used?
23Frequency Allocations (III)
- Need to configure the channels to avoid or reduce
interference by avoiding overlapping channels. - Channel configuration can be done statically or
dynamically.
24Frequency Allocations (IV)
25Output Power
- Power used to generate the signal affects the
coverage area and the power consumption of the
device. - WLANS -gt mains
- WPANS -gt batteries
- Wireless to remove wires!! So ECG is battery
powered
26Pairing ECG and Wireless Technologies
- After looking at the deployment issues discusses,
the IEEE 802.15.4 can support the needs for the
ECG. - A WLAN can support the communication between the
monitor device and remote station. - RF frequencies can be selected for peaceful
coexistence of different wireless technologies.
27Interference
- In the wireless world, anticipation of devices is
very low, since any device can appear anytime
anywhere. - How serious will the interference be?
- How will devices maintain communication?
28Interference in the 2400 MHz Band
- Usage scenario is extended by adding an
individual that enters the patients room using a
Bluetooth device. - The Bluetooth device spans the entire frequency
band. Overlap is inevitable with the WLAN or WPAN
channels.
29Walk in Usage Scenario
- The simulation consists of the WPAN sensors
carrying ECG traffic, which is collected and
transmitted via the WLAN to a remote location. - When the walk in Bluetooth device is activated,
the packet loss at the MAC sublayer of the low
level WPAN monitor is measured for performance. - The loss came up to 60 at close range (0.5m)
- Interference mitigation techniques are needed to
tackle this issue.
30Interference Mitigation Techniques
- Two main categories
- Collaborative require communication between
heterogeneous protocol stacks. - Noncollaborative no direct communication between
devices, rely on channel or network measurements
to detect presence of other devices.
31Noncollaborative Techniques
- Two strategies are used to avoid usage of the
same frequency - Time-Division Multiplexing (TDM) postpone
transmissions till a channel is clear (reduce
packet loss but increase delay) - Frequency-Division Multiplexing (FDM) allocate
different portions of the frequency band to a
specific group of communicating devices. - Neither of these can eradicate interference, and
these techniques are triggered after the
communication is impacted.
32Mobility of Wireless Networks (I)
- Main advantage of using wireless in healthcare is
the ability to move those devices around. - Wireless technologies have to handle the movement
of devices even when there is an ongoing
communication. - In a hospital environment, the assumption is that
the movement is in the hospital and at walking
speed.
33Mobility of Wireless Networks (II)
- Two wireless devices are communicating directly
(Cell phone and earset or ECG sensors and
monitor) - Wireless devices are communicating through an AP
(the patients bed moving out of the current
coverage area of the current WLAN AP) - Handle interference effects and mobility
management
34Handover Management
- Changing the point of attachment to the
infrastructure - Layer 2 handover old and new APs share the same
subnet. - Layer 3 handover the APs are connected to a
different subnet
35Layer 2
- Discovery Phase
- Passive waits for a beacon message sent
periodically by the AP - Active send probe request messages, in which
in-range APs reply to by a probe response message - Authentication Phase mobile nodes and APs
exchange identities. - Association Phase exchange two frames to
allocate an association identifier to the mobile
node
36Layer 3
- Need to discover the information of the link
- IPv6
- Router Advertisement
- Update location of the node with the link
37Summary
- Surveyed several wireless technologies
- Used ECG as a user case for choosing the right
technology - Deployment issues
- Need to fully investigate the requirements of the
medical application, and the functions of the
wireless technology - Continuous evaluation
- Trade offs for wireless networks
38Questions?