| Literature DB >> 30097420 |
Peter Ray Chai1,2, Haipeng Zhang3, Christopher W Baugh3, Guruprasad D Jambaulikar3, Jonathan C McCabe3, Janet M Gorman3, Edward W Boyer1,2, Adam Landman4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hospital staff frequently performs the same process hundreds to thousands of times a day. Customizable Internet of Things buttons are small, wirelessly-enabled devices that trigger specific actions with the press of an integrated button and have the potential to automate some of these repetitive tasks. In addition, IoT buttons generate logs of triggered events that can be used for future process improvements. Although Internet of Things buttons have seen some success as consumer products, little has been reported on their application in hospital systems.Entities:
Keywords: Internet of Things; health care; hospital systems; operations
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30097420 PMCID: PMC6109224 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.9454
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1An Internet of Things (IoT) button. A United States quarter is pictured for scale.
Figure 2Schematic of the process flow of an Internet of Things (IoT) button press. API: application programming interface.
Advantages and challenges of existing hospital notification systems and Internet of Things (IoT) buttons.
| Notification system | Current application | Advantages | Challenges |
| QR codea readers | Notification systems | Universal code that can be accessed through mobile phones or dedicated barcode scanners | Multistep process to activate Requires a mobile phone with QR reading capability or barcode scanner |
| Patient call button | Patient-facing notification system to call nursing staff | Recognizable device with simple user interface | No context for notifications |
| EMRb-based notification rules | Signaling completed tasks based on EMR changes | Improved process flows via EMR events Can be applied quickly through a hospital | Task must be based on EMR change Each new application requires programming |
| Web-based paging system | Sending custom notifications to providers, hospital staff | Web portal allows for access anywhere | Requires accessing paging system to deliver each notification |
| IoT Buttons | Patient or staff facing | Notification delivered with push of a button Notifications can be simple or complex actions | Requires installation of buttons Security and privacy issues Programming or configuration of buttons required |
aQR code: quick response code.
bEMR: electronic medical record.
Privacy and security considerations for Internet of Things (IoT) buttons.
| Potential concerns | Potential solutions |
| Privacy and data breach | Communicate deidentified data Use encryption Disallow continuous network connection and data transfer Enable IoT buttons to communicate via cellular networks to avoid integration with hospital networks |
| Theft | Strategic placement Secure installation |
| Distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks | Lockout times on buttons to prevent DDoS based on number of button presses IoT buttons placed on separate network |
| Failure | Staggered adoption with careful testing of failure rates Initial use in conjunction with existing notification methods |
Figure 3A proposed framework to deploy and evaluate the impact of Internet of Things (IoT) buttons in a hospital.