Abstract Background In recent years, there has been increasing focus on the earlier detection of deterioration in the clinical condition of hospital patients with the aim of instigating earlier treatment to reverse this deterioration and prevent adverse outcomes. This is especially important in the ED, a dynamic environment with large volumes of undifferentiated patients, which carries inherent patient risk. SNAP40 is an innovative medical-grade device that can be worn on the upper arm that continuously monitors patients’ vital signs including relative changes in systolic blood pressure, respiratory rate, heart rate, movement, blood oxygen saturation and temperature. It uses automated risk analysis to potentially allow clinical staff to eas...
Introduction Ambulatory monitoring systems (AMS) can facilitate early detection of clinical deterior...
Background and objectives Intermittent vital signs measurements are the current standard on hospital...
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Intermittent vital signs measurements are the current standard on hospita...
Continuous novel ambulatory monitoring may detect deterioration in Emergency Department (ED) patient...
Contains fulltext : 175605.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)BACKGROUND: Mea...
Background Timely recognition of the deteriorating inpatient remains challenging. Wearable monitori...
Background: Timely recognition of patient deterioration remains challenging. Ambulatory monitoring s...
Current practice uses physiological early warning scoring (EWS) systems to monitor “standard” vital...
Early detection of physiological deterioration has been shown to improve patient outcomes. Due to re...
INTRODUCTION: Monitoring a patient's vital signs forms a basic component of care, enabling the ident...
Introduction Acutely-ill hospitalised patients are at risk of clinical deteriorations such as cardi...
Background:Vital signs are usually recorded once every 8 h in patients at the hospital ward. Early s...
Background Continuous vital sign monitoring may identify changes sooner than current standard monito...
Intermittent manual measurement of vital signs may not rapidly predict sepsis development in febrile...
BACKGROUND: Adverse events are common in high-risk surgical patients, but early detection is difficu...
Introduction Ambulatory monitoring systems (AMS) can facilitate early detection of clinical deterior...
Background and objectives Intermittent vital signs measurements are the current standard on hospital...
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Intermittent vital signs measurements are the current standard on hospita...
Continuous novel ambulatory monitoring may detect deterioration in Emergency Department (ED) patient...
Contains fulltext : 175605.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)BACKGROUND: Mea...
Background Timely recognition of the deteriorating inpatient remains challenging. Wearable monitori...
Background: Timely recognition of patient deterioration remains challenging. Ambulatory monitoring s...
Current practice uses physiological early warning scoring (EWS) systems to monitor “standard” vital...
Early detection of physiological deterioration has been shown to improve patient outcomes. Due to re...
INTRODUCTION: Monitoring a patient's vital signs forms a basic component of care, enabling the ident...
Introduction Acutely-ill hospitalised patients are at risk of clinical deteriorations such as cardi...
Background:Vital signs are usually recorded once every 8 h in patients at the hospital ward. Early s...
Background Continuous vital sign monitoring may identify changes sooner than current standard monito...
Intermittent manual measurement of vital signs may not rapidly predict sepsis development in febrile...
BACKGROUND: Adverse events are common in high-risk surgical patients, but early detection is difficu...
Introduction Ambulatory monitoring systems (AMS) can facilitate early detection of clinical deterior...
Background and objectives Intermittent vital signs measurements are the current standard on hospital...
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Intermittent vital signs measurements are the current standard on hospita...