| Literature DB >> 23565984 |
Hamdi Aloulou1, Mounir Mokhtari, Thibaut Tiberghien, Jit Biswas, Clifton Phua, Jin Hong Kenneth Lin, Philip Yap.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: With an ever-growing ageing population, dementia is fast becoming the chronic disease of the 21st century. Elderly people affected with dementia progressively lose their autonomy as they encounter problems in their Activities of Daily Living (ADLs). Hence, they need supervision and assistance from their family members or professional caregivers, which can often lead to underestimated psychological and financial stress for all parties. The use of Ambient Assistive Living (AAL) technologies aims to empower people with dementia and relieve the burden of their caregivers.The aim of this paper is to present the approach we have adopted to develop and deploy a system for ambient assistive living in an operating nursing home, and evaluate its performance and usability in real conditions. Based on this approach, we emphasise on the importance of deployments in real world settings as opposed to prototype testing in laboratories.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23565984 PMCID: PMC3691578 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6947-13-42
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Timeline for the development and deployment of our solution in the nursing home (14 months trial)
| Mar 2010 - Mar 2011 | Observations, discussions & prototyping | Pre-deployment |
| Apr - June 2011 | Prototyping & Demo | |
| Jul 2011 | Application for ethics approval | |
| Aug 2011 | Ethics approval obtained | |
| Aug - Oct 2011 | Initial trial setup and field testing of system | |
| Oct - Jan 2012 | First phase (1 room, 4 months trial) | Deployment |
| Jan - Feb 2012 | Analysis, features update & performance tuning | + |
| Feb - May 2012 | Second phase (1 room, 4 months trial) | Ground truth |
| May - June 2012 | Analysis & questionnaire survey | + |
| June - Nov 2012 | Third phase (3 rooms, 6 months trial) | Data analysis |
| Nov - Dec 2012 | Analysis & questionnaire survey |
A snapshot of data collected from observation sessions
| Rooms observation | • Two to three beds in each room |
| | • One bathroom is attached to each room |
| | • Food and medications are taken in the common area |
| | • TV is only available in the common area |
| ADLs observation | • One resident (level 2) keeps on washing hand or showering for hours |
| | • Assisting shower is very difficult for nurses |
| | • Patients forget to turn off the taps |
| | • Patients need instructions of what to do next |
| | • Patients need encouragement to initiate activities |
| | • They forget to continue activities if they were interrupted, e.g. forget to finish eating after going to the toilet |
| | • They forget things they have already done, e.g., some may shower too often |
| Group activities observation | • 10 to 15 residents |
| | • 2 to 4 professional caregivers |
| | • Participants are divided into small groups |
| • Caregivers need to give instructions |
Participants profiles
| Patient 1 | 90 | Need minimal assistance* | 8 |
| Patient 2 | 92 | Need moderate assistance** | 8 |
| Patient 3 | 85 | Need moderate assistance | 8 |
| Patient 4 | 79 | Need minimal assistance | 9 |
| Patient 5 | 87 | Need moderate assistance | 9 |
| Patient 6 | 92 | Need moderate assistance | 11 |
| Patient 7 | 82 | Need moderate assistance | 11 |
| Patient 8 | 78 | Need moderate assistance | 11 |
*Minimal assistance: Provided assistance consists only on elementary activities (walking, lying, etc.).
**Moderate assistance: Provided assistance includes more critical activities (eating, toileting, etc.).
Figure 1Partial floor map of the nursing home deployment.
Sample of caregivers’ log-sheet
| | Where is patient right now? | Did patient shower for too long? | Did patient forget to turn off tap? | Did patient forget to flush toilet? | Did patient wander around aimlessly? | Did patient ask for something? |
| | -Bedroom | -Yes | -Yes | -Yes | -Yes | -Yes |
| | -Bathroom | -No | -No | -No | -No | -No |
| | -Dining area | If so what did (S)he ask for? | | | | |
| | -Common area | | | | | |
| | -Other | | | | | |
| Hour 1 | | | | | | |
| Hour 2 | | | | | | |
| ... |
Figure 2Ontology evolution after a context update.
Figure 3Ontology evolution after new service deployment.
Assistive services deployed in the nursing home
| Wandering at night | Motion sensor | Smart-phones |
| | Pressure sensor | Nursing |
| | | console |
| Showering too long | Motion sensor | Speakers |
| | Vibrator | Smart-phones |
| | | Nursing |
| | | console |
| Leaving the wash-room | Proximity sensor | Speakers |
| tap on | Vibrator | Smart-phones |
| | | Nursing |
| | | console |
| Toilet fall detection | Motion sensor | Smart-phones |
| | Proximity sensor | Nursing |
| console |
Figure 4Patient’s detected problems evolution.
Figure 5Pie chart for system crash reasons in the nursing home.
Figure 6Chronological heatmap of caregivers’ log-sheets (ground truth) for Patients 4 & 5 (Room 9) in February and early-March 2012 (1.5 months).
Figure 7Chronological heatmap of system log data (sensor data) cross-referenced with caregivers’ log-sheets (ground truth) for Patients 4 & 5 (Room 9) in early-March 2012 (7 days) for bathroom activity.