July 20189 allergy to it. The computer is then used to confirm that the medication has been taken, with a note auto-created on the patient's Electronic Health Record including the drug, time, date, and ID of the nurse. This effectively allows for nursing staff to provide the right care, to the right patient, at the right time. · The critical hour: In critical cases time is of the essence. For example, with angioplasty surgery the goal might be to have the patient operated on within 60 minutes. By giving the patient a BLE wristband, the wristband can be scanned by sensors as the patient moves through treatment phases. If their progress slows, alarms can be automatically raised with senior clinicians who can intervene. In doing so, the hospital can also collect data that can assist them to streamline the patients' journey.· Wrong blood in tube: Despite everyone's best efforts, mistakes happen when taking blood in busy wards. By using mobile computers and printers, these critical errors can be avoided. Nurses can use mobile computers to view what tests are needed, scan a patient's wristbands to confirm their ID, be guided through the blood collection process, and print barcode labels that are fixed to the sample. All of this takes place at the bedside, which we all know BY GIVING THE PATIENT A BLE WRISTBAND, THE WRISTBAND CAN BE SCANNED BY SENSORS AS THE PATIENT MOVES THROUGH TREATMENT PHASESis vital to ensure that errors are avoided. The barcode ensures that the vial is always identified correctly and it can be tracked across the sample workflow--from the ward, to transit to the lab, and then into the lab itself.There are many other ways that IoT will advance healthcare: from always knowing where your teams are in hospitals to ensure they can reach a critical patient quickly, to tracking every piece of equipment--everywhere, and holding the right amount of stock in your pharmacy--always.Data: The Currency of ImprovementIoT collects data from across your operations: data that can become the currency of improvement. Because, by using Big Data systems to uncover trends, you can continually revise workflows and even isolate ways to improve diagnosis, care, and treatment.As we look forward, IoT is our number one prescription to advance the way our clinicians work, to support them with more intuitive technology, and, ultimately, to enhance patient care. George Pepes
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