Pre-hospital applications, such as triage, natural disasters, and nursing homes, will benefit from ubiquitous, embedded systems that wirelessly communicate patient�s vital signs. In order for an accurate, automated electronic system to be constructed, the system must be carefully designed in regards to usability and functionality. The sensor network in the Advanced Health and Disaster Network (AID-N) ubiquitously propagates information from the incident to the hospital. In this paper, we specifically focus on the usability concerns of a specific pre-hospital application, triage, and explore open issues in wireless medical systems for healthcare.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 Massey2006
%A Massey, Tammara
%A Gao, Tia
%A Bernstein, Daniel
%A Husain, Azmat
%A Crawford, David
%A White, David
%A Selavo, Leo
%A Sarrafzadeh, Majid
%B Proceedings of UbiHealth 2006: The 4th International Workshop on Ubiquitous Computing for Pervasive Healthcare Applications
%D 2006
%K monitoring, computing, real-time, mhealth, triage, pervasive ehealth
%T Pervasive Triage: Towards Ubiquitous, Real-time Monitoring of Vital Signs for Pre-hospital Applications
%X Pre-hospital applications, such as triage, natural disasters, and nursing homes, will benefit from ubiquitous, embedded systems that wirelessly communicate patient�s vital signs. In order for an accurate, automated electronic system to be constructed, the system must be carefully designed in regards to usability and functionality. The sensor network in the Advanced Health and Disaster Network (AID-N) ubiquitously propagates information from the incident to the hospital. In this paper, we specifically focus on the usability concerns of a specific pre-hospital application, triage, and explore open issues in wireless medical systems for healthcare.
@inproceedings{Massey2006,
abstract = {Pre-hospital applications, such as triage, natural disasters, and nursing homes, will benefit from ubiquitous, embedded systems that wirelessly communicate patient�s vital signs. In order for an accurate, automated electronic system to be constructed, the system must be carefully designed in regards to usability and functionality. The sensor network in the Advanced Health and Disaster Network (AID-N) ubiquitously propagates information from the incident to the hospital. In this paper, we specifically focus on the usability concerns of a specific pre-hospital application, triage, and explore open issues in wireless medical systems for healthcare.},
added-at = {2012-01-19T15:16:25.000+0100},
author = {Massey, Tammara and Gao, Tia and Bernstein, Daniel and Husain, Azmat and Crawford, David and White, David and Selavo, Leo and Sarrafzadeh, Majid},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/21cfc221d96a29dd64cd3358089d3a288/enitsirhc},
booktitle = {Proceedings of UbiHealth 2006: The 4th International Workshop on Ubiquitous Computing for Pervasive Healthcare Applications},
interhash = {567dbdada3560ac5f48c3cd308cc435f},
intrahash = {1cfc221d96a29dd64cd3358089d3a288},
keywords = {monitoring, computing, real-time, mhealth, triage, pervasive ehealth},
timestamp = {2012-01-19T15:16:25.000+0100},
title = {Pervasive Triage: Towards Ubiquitous, Real-time Monitoring of Vital Signs for Pre-hospital Applications},
year = 2006
}