The Journal of mHealth Vol 3 Issue 1 (Feb/Mar 2016) | Page 34

Isansys: No More Wires Continued from page 31 Keith that Isansys is not only about patient monitoring, as otherwise there would be only a small amount of innovation in their work, but additionally about answering the question: What do you do with all this information once you have it? The PSE is the answer to that. Providing a clearer, more granular view of a patient’s current condition, the PSE allows a healthcare professional to make a more informed decision regarding the treatment of their patient. The PSE is a platform and clinical tool. It can be calibrated alongside the wireless monitors to deliver predictive analytics based on a patient’s readings in relation to a particular disease or condition. This can then be tied to early-warning scores that are defined by the participating hospital or current healthcare guidelines. With proper authorisation to access the online platform of the PSE, a history of data on a particular patient can be accessed. Tracking every heartbeat, breath, change in body temperature and varying blood oxygen saturation, the PSE is open-source technology that can be hosted by any hospital or care provider. No information is shared with third parties. Using this formula, Isansys has developed a working relationship with the public healthcare system that is rarely seen in the current digital health landscape and is admirable for its ability to change lives. The Isansys technology is currently being adopted by various hospitals across the UK. Royal Free Hospital, London is using the PSE in the Hepatology department in order to monitor patients with advanced liver disease. Early reports show that the PSE using a collection of physiological data offers a non-invasive alternative to traditional lab tests for the prediction of patient mortality. Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, has equipped its patients undergoing cancer treatment with the PSE to detect and be an early warning indicator for sepsis, identifying it on day one (instead of day three or four with the current protocol). The use of wireless monitoring in these environments means that for these patients the development of a secondary condition such as sepsis arising from the cancer treatment can be made avoidable. The importance and human impact of Isansys' work has been shown in its collaboration with Birmingham Children’s Hospital in the paediatric cardiology wards. This work is expected to lead to a hospital-wide implementation of wireless monitoring of children in the future as a result of greater mobility of the patients and the lower costs of the equipment. Continued from page 30 gul Gumuz, Gambella, Oromia, Somali, Southern Nations Nationalities and Peoples’ Region and Tigray Regional Health Bureaus. 30 ministries of health include: Benin, Cambodia, Chad, Colombia, Cote d' Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Fiji, Guinea, 32 February/March 2016 The Oxford AHSN and Innovate UK (in particular SBRI Healthcare) have both supported Isansys in the deliverance of this technology, in particular by facilitating collaboration with the local healthcare services and granting access to governmental funding respectively, thereby helping Isansys to continue to grow. Now in its sixth year of operation, the Isansys team works diligently to free all patients from being literally tied into traditional, distressing medical environments, and to give them space to heal. This case study has been written by Akil Benjamin of Comuzi in conjunction with The John Snow Group and Simmons & Simmons. n Kiribati, Laos, Malawi, Mexico, Mozambique, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Nigeria, Zanzibar, Zimbabwe and Yemen. (In addition ministries of health in Cameroon and Nepal conducted baseline mapping projects during the life of GTMP without the use of GTMP methods.) 2 funders include: DFID and USAID 5. Based on weighted sample: in each village chosen for mapping, the team randomly selected 30 neighbouring households, and examined every inhabitant except for children under a year old. Photographs by Sightsavers/Tom Saater n