| Literature DB >> 27158528 |
Gerrit Niezen1, Parisa Eslambolchilar1, Harold Thimbleby1.
Abstract
Open-source hardware is hardware whose design is made publicly available so anyone can study, modify, distribute, make and sell the design or the hardware based on that design. Some open-source hardware projects can potentially be used as active medical devices. The open-source approach offers a unique combination of advantages, including reducing costs and faster innovation. This article compares 10 of open-source healthcare projects in terms of how easy it is to obtain the required components and build the device.Entities:
Keywords: Affordable; Global Health; Inventions
Year: 2016 PMID: 27158528 PMCID: PMC4853539 DOI: 10.1136/bmjinnov-2015-000080
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Innov ISSN: 2055-642X
Figure 1Open-source CT scanner (Photo by Peter Jansen, image licensed under the Creative Commons BY-SA license).
Figure 2Raspberry Pi Peristaltic Pump (Photo by Amber Fechko, image licensed under the Creative Commons BY-SA license).
Figure 3Arduino (bottom, showing USB connector) and e-Health shield. UK £1 coin (2.25 cm diameter) for scale. (Photo by Patrick Oladimeji, image licensed under the Creative Commons BY-SA license).
Figure 4Blood glucose meter connected to e-Health shield (Photo by Patrick Oladimeji, image licensed under the Creative Commons BY-SA license).
Figure 5OpenBCI brain-computer interface (Photo by Wikimedia Commons, image licensed under the Creative Commons BY-SA license).
Summary of project comparison
| Project | Estimated cost to build | OSHW license used | Microcontroller/platform used |
|---|---|---|---|
| MyOpen | $250 | GNU public license | Blackfin DSP |
| e-Nable | $350 | Creative commons attribution non-commercial | Arduino |
| CT scanner | $300 | GNU public license V.3 | Arduino |
| Fechko's peristaltic pump | $170 | N/A | Raspberry Pi or Arduino |
| Wijnen | $97 | Creative commons attribution share-alike | Raspberry Pi |
| e-Health sensor platform | $500 | Unknown | Raspberry Pi or Arduino |
| OpenBCI | $450–$800 | Creative commons share-alike | Arduino or ChipKit |
| DIY blood pressure monitor | $50 | N/A | Microchip PIC |
| Diabeto | $50 | Unknown | Atmel ATTiny |
| Nightscout xDrip | $60 | N/A | Pololu Wixel |
DIY, do-it-yourself; DSP, digital signal processing; N/A, not applicable; OSHW, open-source hardware.