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GE Healthcare ’smart patient room’ pilot begins; promises real-time monitoring

By | September 16, 2010, 3:46 AM PDT

GE Healthcare announced on Wednesday that its “Smart Patient Room” pilot at Bassett Medical Center in Cooperstown, N.Y. has been cleared to begin collecting data.

The program applies technology to the hospital room, integrating technology to provide staff with real-time monitoring of clinicians’ work to improve safety in the harried, exhausting atmosphere of a working hospital.

The top safety issue in hospitals today: medical error. According to the Institute of Medicine, medical error is the eighth leading cause of death in the U. S., accounting for an estimated 44,000 to 100,000 preventable deaths per year.

The system is designed to track staff adherence to protocol, such as washing hands, consistent clinical rounds, and monitoring to ensure that a patient doesn’t fall. (Frighteningly, falls cost the U.S. healthcare system $1 billion annually, according to the American Hospital Association.)

The Smart Patient Room collects real-time information, then generates insights to help clinicians manage their workflow. The goal: determine what process and behavioral changes can create a safer patient environment.

The first step is moving from the lab to the real world. GE hopes to learn how well its technology works at Bassett, a 180-bed, acute care inpatient teaching facility.

The announcement was made in conjunction with two other “healthymagination” projects, which I’ll detail briefly below:

  • One project has researchers working to develop point-of-care diagnostic tests for quick diagnosis of Tuberculosis in the field.
  • A second project has researchers developing a new imaging platform for the operating room intended to help surgeons better visualize cancerous tissue they are trying to safely remove.

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Andrew Nusca

About Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca is editor of SmartPlanet.

Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca

Editor

Andrew Nusca is editor of SmartPlanet and an associate editor for ZDNet. Previously, he worked at Money, Men's Vogue and Popular Mechanics magazines. He holds degrees from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and New York University. He based in New York but resides in Philadelphia.

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Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca
Andrew Nusca does not hold any investments in the companies he covers.
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RE: GE Healthcare 'smart patient room' pilot begins; promises real-time monitoring
"harried exhausting atmosphere of a working hospital" does about sum it up.

I worked for 43 years in that environment and it got progressively worse, primarily due to the huge amount of paper work required to fend off lawyers. You can transfer that to the computer but it is still time away from the patient. And most of us old time nurses became nurses to help people. Not to fend off lawyers in a harrassing and exhausting workplace.

I have earned my retirement and even had a party at the end of three years (legal limit for lawsuits), yes I made it through my whole practice without a suit. About half my friends were not so fortunate. They were all exonerated but ruined as nurses as doctors. They never had the same attitude toward patients again.
Posted by IMWeira
16th Sep 2010
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