DocumentCode
1759208
Title
A Large-Scale Clinical Validation of an Integrated Monitoring System in the Emergency Department
Author
Clifton, D.A. ; Wong, D. ; Clifton, L. ; Wilson, Stuart ; Way, R. ; Pullinger, R. ; Tarassenko, Lionel
Author_Institution
Dept. of Eng. Sci., Univ. of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Volume
17
Issue
4
fYear
2013
fDate
41456
Firstpage
835
Lastpage
842
Abstract
We consider an integrated patient monitoring system, combining electronic patient records with high-rate acquisition of patient physiological data. There remain many challenges in increasing the robustness of “e-health” applications to a level at which they are clinically useful, particularly in the use of automated algorithms used to detect and cope with artifact in data contained within the electronic patient record, and in analyzing and communicating the resultant data for reporting to clinicians. There is a consequential “plague of pilots,” in which engineering prototype systems do not enter into clinical use. This paper describes an approach in which, for the first time, the Emergency Department (ED) of a major research hospital has adopted such systems for use during a large clinical trial. We describe the disadvantages of existing evaluation metrics when applied to such large trials, and propose a solution suitable for large-scale validation. We demonstrate that machine learning technologies embedded within healthcare information systems can provide clinical benefit, with the potential to improve patient outcomes in the busy environment of a major ED and other high-dependence areas of patient care.
Keywords
data acquisition; health care; hospitals; learning (artificial intelligence); medical computing; medical information systems; patient care; patient monitoring; Emergency Department; e-health application; electronic patient records; healthcare information systems; high-rate patient physiological data acquisition; hospital; integrated patient monitoring system; large-scale clinical validation; machine learning; patient care; Biomedical monitoring; Clinical trials; Hospitals; Manuals; Monitoring; Temperature measurement; Biomedical informatics; biomedical signal processing; machine learning;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical and Health Informatics, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
2168-2194
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JBHI.2012.2234130
Filename
6384629
Link To Document