Remote health-care monitoring using personal care connect

  • Authors:
  • Marion Blount;Virinder M. Batra;Andrew N. Capella;Maria R. Ebling;William F. Jerome;Sherri M. Martin;Michael Nidd;Michael R. Niemi;Steven P. Wright

  • Affiliations:
  • IBM Research Division, Thomas J. Watson Research Center, Hawthorne, New York;IBM Software Group, Durham, North Carolina;IBM Software Group, Durham, North Carolina;IBM Research Division, Thomas J. Watson Research Center, Hawthorne, New York;IBM Research Division, Thomas J. Watson Research Center, Hawthorne, New York;IBM Software Group, Austin, Texas;IBM Research GmbH, Zurich Research Laboratory, Rüschlikon, Switzerland;IBM Software Group, Boca Raton, Florida;IBM United Kingdom Limited, Winchester, Hampshire, England

  • Venue:
  • IBM Systems Journal
  • Year:
  • 2007

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Abstract

Caring for patients with chronic illnesses is costly-nearly $1.27 trillion today and predicted to grow much larger. To address this trend, we have designed and built a platform, called Personal Care Connect (PCC), to facilitate the remote monitoring of patients. By providing caregivers with timely access to a patient's health status, they can provide patients with appropriate preventive interventions, helping to avoid hospitalization and to improve the patient's quality of care and quality of life. PCC may reduce health-care costs by focusing on preventive measures and monitoring instead of emergency care and hospital admissions. Although PCC may have features in common with other remote monitoring systems, it differs from them in that it is a standards-based, open platform designed to integrate with devices from device vendors and applications from independent software vendors. One of the motivations for PCC is to create and propagate a working environment of medical devices and applications that results in innovative solutions. In this paper, we describe the PCC remote monitoring system, including our pilot tests of the system.