| Literature DB >> 34950222 |
Lai Li1,2, Rong Liang1,2, Yumei Zhou1,2.
Abstract
Clinical nursing work fails to integrate various nursing tasks such as basic care, observation of patients' conditions, medication, treatment, communication, and health guidance to provide continuous and full nursing care for patients. Based on this, this paper uses the Internet of Things (IoT) technology to optimize the infusion process and achieve closed-loop management of medications and improve the efficiency and safety of infusion and medication administration by using a rational and effective outpatient and emergency infusion and medication management system. The system was built by applying wireless network, barcode technology, RFID, infrared tube sensing, and other technologies and was combined with actual nursing work to summarize application techniques and precautions. The application of this system will become a new highlight of medical informatization, improve patient experience, monitor infusion safety, enhance nursing care, reduce emergency medical disputes, improve patient satisfaction, and will create good social and economic benefits for the hospital.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34950222 PMCID: PMC8691973 DOI: 10.1155/2021/1824300
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Comput Math Methods Med ISSN: 1748-670X Impact factor: 2.238
Figure 1Block diagram of the overall structure of the system.
Figure 2Schematic diagram of RFID-based wireless infusion operation.
Figure 3Infusion information collection and control terminal.
Figure 4Block diagram of droplet information processing control unit.
Figure 5Diagram of signal transmission of ward call system.
Figure 6Nursing monitoring system architecture diagram.
Description of the use of the system from the first half of 2020 to the first half of 2021.
| Infusion number | Person times of infusion reaction (person times) | Infusion error | Infusion check error | Patient not called | Nurse patient disputes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before application | 9819 | 81 | 9 | 256 | 1309 | 458 |
| After application | 11140 | 90 | 0 | 0 | 32 | 58 |
|
| 0.019 | 3.404 | 294.032 | 1482.736 | 373.183 | |
|
| 0.891 | 0.065 | ≤0.001 | ≤0.001 | ≤0.001 |
Comparison of the average number of nursing hours before and after system application (min).
| Before application ( | After application ( |
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PDrug review | 4.89 ± 1.56 | 2.01 ± 0.45 | 183.26 | 0.000 |
| Administration check | 1.77 ± 0.33 | 0.56 ± 0.22 | 315.54 | 0.000 |
| Inspection list writing | 2.06 ± 0.45 | 0.98 ± 0.24 | 220.25 | 0.000 |
Satisfaction of 302 patients using the system surveyed in the first half of 2016 (cases).
| Very nice | Better | Commonly | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Is the waiting time for outpatient infusion satisfactory? | 227 | 70 | 5 |
| Is the working process of infusion room satisfactory? | 240 | 40 | 22 |
| Is it safe to check the drugs for outpatient infusion? | 268 | 34 | 0 |
| Is it necessary for infrared continuous monitoring of drip speed and liquid level? | 278 | 20 | 4 |
Figure 7Ocean reflectance.
Figure 8Confusion matrix of the test set.
Figure 9Operation error of nurses with different number of patients.
Figure 10Monitoring efficiency of nurses to patients under different length at the same time.