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Applications of Medical Body Area Network Service (MBANS)

This document discusses the usage and requirements for MBANS devices in in-hospital and remote home healthcare applications.

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Applications of Medical Body Area Network Service (MBANS)

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  1. Project: IEEE P802.15 Working Group for Wireless Personal Area Networks (WPANs) Submission Title: [Applications of Medical Body Area Network Service (MBANS)] Date Submitted: [1 March 2011] Source: [Dave Evans], Company [Philips] Address [64-68 London Road, Redhill, UK] Voice:[+44 1737788216], FAX: [Add FAX number], E-Mail:[david.evans@philips.com] Re: [TG 4j Call for Applications document number 15-11-0139] [If this is a response to a Call for Contributions, cite the name and date of the Call for Contributions to which this document responds, as well as the relevant item number in the Call for Contributions.] [Note: Contributions that are not responsive to this section of the template, and contributions which do not address the topic under which they are submitted, may be refused or consigned to the “General Contributions” area.] Abstract: [This document describes the usage and requirements for MBANS devices in the in-hospital and remote home healthcare applications.] Purpose: [For consideration by TG 4j in response to the Call for Applications.] Notice: This document has been prepared to assist the IEEE P802.15. It is offered as a basis for discussion and is not binding on the contributing individual(s) or organization(s). The material in this document is subject to change in form and content after further study. The contributor(s) reserve(s) the right to add, amend or withdraw material contained herein. Release: The contributor acknowledges and accepts that this contribution becomes the property of IEEE and may be made publicly available by P802.15. Dave Evans, Philips

  2. Applications of Medical Body Area Network Service (MBANS) Dave Evans, Philips

  3. Medical Body Area Network (MBAN) - A wireless network of sensors around a patient to provide monitoring services PM in General Wards PM in High Acuity Areas • Clinical benefits • Extension of monitoring into care areas that are currently unmonitored • Improve healthcare workflow efficiency, safety and clinical outcome. • Patient mobility, comfort, infection control • Monitoring flexibility and scalability • Reduced overall monitoring costs • EHR support MBAN Remote Home PM Mobile Ambulance PM Dave Evans, Philips

  4. Proposed Regulation on Usage of MBANS Spectrum • Eligibility & Permissible Communications • Licenses by rule operations by authorized health care professionals and by any other person, if such use is prescribed by a health care professional.  Limited to transmission of data (no voice) used for monitoring, diagnosing or treating patients by duly authorized healthcare professionals. • Frequencies & Authorized Locations • 2360-2390 MHzMBANS operations in the 2360-2390 MHz band limited to health care facilities only. Healthcare facility MBANS registration/coordination and electronic key/beacon MBANS device control mechanism needed to access part or all of the 2360-2900 MHz band. • 2390-2400 MHzoperations permitted anywhere Citizen’s Band (CB) radios may operate, including healthcare facilities, ambulances, and patient homes. • Technical Parameters • All stations must employ unrestricted contention-based protocol.  • Maximum emission bandwidth (20-dB emission BW) of 5 MHz. • Maximum EIRP not to exceed the lesser of 1 mWand 10 log (B) dBm in the 2360-2390MHz band and the lesser of 20mWand 16 + 10 log (B) dBm in the 2390-2400MHz band, where B is the 20-dB emission BW. • Only medical applications would be allowed • Both in-hospital and remote monitoring applications would be eligible Dave Evans, Philips

  5. In-hospital Applications • Applications • Critical care monitoring services • Intensive Care Units (ICUs), Operating Rooms (ORs), Post-Anesthesia Care Units (PACUs), Emergency Rooms (ERs) Medical/Surgery, maternity, radiology • Monitoring in general wards • Transport, recovery rooms, step down areas, wireless cardiac monitoring • Monitoring in ambulance • Huge potential market • 5,747 acute care hospitals in US (based on 2008 statistics) • 879,105 staffed beds • 56% are monitored (492,298 beds) • MBANS would simplify patient care and reduce costs • 44% are unmonitored (386,806 beds) • Low & medium acuity cableless PM and PM in general wards • 1500+ Rapid Response Teams • Reduction in unplanned ICU admissions • Reduction in healthcare costs Dave Evans, Philips

  6. In-hospital System Architecture Patient worn sensor devices … SpO2 Blood Pressure ECG MBANS short range radios Bed side Monitor Patient worn hub device Wi-Fi, WMTS or other long-rang radios Remote central station Dave Evans, Philips

  7. General Requirements of In-hospital Applications • General Parameters • Data rates from bps to kbps per sensor • Usually in-room service • TX/RX in a same room with a range <= 3m • Low duty cycle • <25%, with a typical value of ~10% or less • Robust link performance needed • Long battery life • Several days or even weeks • Deployment density • Usually < 10 MBANS networks coexisting with each other • Low cost • Commercial off the shelf radios Dave Evans, Philips

  8. Remote Home Healthcare Applications • Applications • Extended care into the patient’s home during the critical time after a hospitalization episode • Shortened hospital stay, reduced re-hospitalization rate • Chronic disease management monitoring systems • Cardiac conditions, mostly notably congestive heart failure (CHF), diabetes, asthma, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder (COPD) Dave Evans, Philips

  9. General Requirements of Remote Home Healthcare Applications • General Parameters • Data rates from bps to kbps per sensor • Large coverage preferred (multi-room coverage) • TX/RX may not in a same room • Extremely low duty cycle • Usually ~2% or less • Long measurement period or event driven data communications • Robust link performance needed • Long battery life • Several days or even weeks • Low deployment density • Usually ~2 or fewer MBANS networks at a same location • Low cost • Commercial off the shelf radios Dave Evans, Philips

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