| Literature DB >> 28679490 |
Mariska Weenk1, Harry van Goor1, Bas Frietman1, Lucien Jlpg Engelen2, Cornelis Jhm van Laarhoven1, Jan Smit3, Sebastian Jh Bredie3, Tom H van de Belt2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Measurement of vital signs in hospitalized patients is necessary to assess the clinical situation of the patient. Early warning scores (EWS), such as the modified early warning score (MEWS), are generally calculated 3 times a day, but these may not capture early deterioration. A delay in diagnosing deterioration is associated with increased mortality. Continuous monitoring with wearable devices might detect clinical deterioration at an earlier stage, which allows clinicians to take corrective actions.Entities:
Keywords: continuous monitoring; remote sensing technology; vital signs; wireless technology
Year: 2017 PMID: 28679490 PMCID: PMC5517820 DOI: 10.2196/mhealth.7208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.773
Figure 1ViSi Mobile system (left) and HealthPatch (right).
Accepted discrepancies between nurse measurements, ViSi Mobile, and HealthPatch.
| Vital sign | Accepted discrepancy |
| Heart rate | 5 beats/min |
| Respiratory rate | 2 breaths/min |
| Oxygen saturation | 2% |
| Temperaturea | 0.5˚C |
| Blood pressure | 5 mm Hg |
| MEWS | 1 |
aViSi Mobile and HealthPatch measure skin temperature.
Figure 2Included patients and vital sign measurements.
Figure 3Bland-Altman plots: (a) heart rate (VM and HP), (b) respiratory rate (VM and HP), (c) systolic and diastolic blood pressure (VM). Dotted lines indicate mean difference and solid lines indicate limits of agreement.
Figure 4Bland-Altman plots showing modified early warning score: (a) VM and HP, (b) VM and HP (jittered). Dotted lines indicate mean difference and solid lines indicate limits of agreement.
ViSi Mobile and HealthPatch data in comparison with corresponding nurse measurements.
| Vital signs | Nurse | ViSi Mobile | HealthPatch | ||
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| Mean (SD)j | Mean (SD) | Mean difference (SD) versus nurse | Mean (SD) | Mean difference (SD) versus nurse |
| HRf (beats/min) | 81.81 (13.12) | 81.62 (12.23) | −0.20 (5.54) | 84.34 (12.24) | −1.52c (5.63) |
| RRg (breaths/min) | 17.38 (3.89) | 16.20 (4.57) | 1.19a (3.43) | 18.02 (5.82) | −0.64 (4.94) |
| Saturation (%) | 97.00 (96.00 to 98.00)d | 97.00 (95.00 to 98.00)d | 0.10 (1.65) | N/Ak | N/A |
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| N/A | |||||
| N/A | N/A | ||||
aP=.002.
bP<.001.
cP=.01.
dOxygen saturation was reported as median with interquartile range.
eSkin temperature.
fHR: heart rate.
gRR: respiratory rate.
hBP: blood pressure.
iMEWS: modified early warning score.
jSD: standard deviation.
kN/A: Not applicable.
ViSi Mobile (VM) and HealthPatch (HP) data in comparison with corresponding nurse measurements.
| Vital signs | ViSi Mobile | HealthPatch |
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| Difference; nurse-VM (%) | Difference; nurse-HP (%) |
| HRa (beats/min) | ≤5: 71 (82.5) | ≤5: 65 (75.6) |
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| 6-10: 12 (14.0) | 6-10: 16 (18.6) |
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| >10: 3 (3.5) | >10: 5 (5.8) |
| RRb (breaths/min) | ≤2: 50 (58.2) | ≤2: 36 (41.9) |
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| 3-5: 26 (30.2) | 3-5: 31 (36.0) |
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| >5: 10 (11.6) | >5: 19 (22.1) |
| Saturation (%) | ≤2: 76 (88.4) | N/Ae |
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| 3-4: 9 (10.5) |
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| ≥5: 1 (1.1) |
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| BPc systolic (mm Hg) | ≤5: 36 (41.9) | N/A |
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| 6-14: 33 (38.4) |
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| ≥15: 17 (19.7) |
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| BP diastolic (mm Hg) | ≤5: 27 (31.4) | N/A |
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| 6-14: 40 (46.5) |
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| 15: 19 (22.1) |
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| MEWSd | −4: 1 (1.2) | −3: 9 (10.5) |
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| −3: 5 (5.8) | −2: 11 (12.8) |
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| −2: 4 (4.7) | −1: 13 (15.1) |
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| −1: 23 (26.7) | 0: 47 (54.7) |
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| 0: 40 (46.5) | 1: 3 (3.5) |
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| 1: 10 (11.6) | 2: 2 (2.3) |
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| 2: 3 (3.5) | 3: 1 (1.2) |
aHR: heart rate.
bRR: respiratory rate.
cBP: blood pressure.
dMEWS: modified early warning score.
eN/A: not applicable.
Users’ experiences.
| Users’experience | Nurse | Patient | Relatives | ||
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| Nurse could keep eye on vital signs more easily |
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| Feelings of safety |
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| Earlier interventions |
| + |
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| Adverse events (redness and itching) |
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| Not aware of HPb |
| + |
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| Small size of HP |
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| Good adhesive properties |
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| Not being restricted during daily activities |
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| More freedom of movements |
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| Invisibility under clothes |
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| Better insight on own vital signs |
| + |
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| VMc wrist device too big/heavy |
| − |
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| Patches came off very quickly |
| − |
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| VM has too many cables |
| − |
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| Short VM battery life |
| − |
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| Good adhesive properties | + |
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| Very easy to attach the devices | + |
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| Bad Wi-Fi connection between VM and Toughbook | − |
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aNo positive or negative effects in the “Structure” or “Context” fields were found.
bHP: HealthPatch.
cVM: ViSi Mobile.