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TeleMed and eHealth

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TeleMed and eHealth 06. Lifestyle Monitoring as a Predictive Tool in Telecare ... around the time of a specific, known event in the life of our participants, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: TeleMed and eHealth


1
TeleMed and eHealth06
  • Lifestyle Monitoring as a Predictive Tool in
    Telecare
  • Hanson, J.1, Osipovic, D.1, Hine, N.2, Amaral,
    T.2, Curry, R.3 and Barlow, J.3
  • 1 The Bartlett School of Graduate Studies,
    University College London, UK
  • 2 School of Computing, University of Dundee, UK
  • 3 Tanaka Business School, Imperial College
    London, UK

2
What is telecare?
  • Care provided remotely by means of information
    and communication technology (ICT) to people in
    their own homes. (Curry et al., 2003).
  • Telecare at home can be provided by deploying a
    wide variety of sensors which monitor
  • - Security and safety of the domestic environment
  • - Personal safety
  • - Vital health signs
  • - Daily activities or lifestyle

Chair sensor
Door sensor
PIR
Fall detector
3
Three generations of telecare
2nd generation 1st generation
3rd generation
Prediction of possible acute situations
Automatic detection and generation of alert calls
Personal response without system intelligence
  • Three generation of Telecare (Porteus and
    Brownsell 2000)
  • Generations 1 and 2 are in active mode. Real time
    response to an emergency.
  • Third generation is in passive mode. Continuous
    monitoring of a persons behaviour within the
    home.

4
Aims of Telecare
  • The rationale behind this way of delivering
    care is an assumption that it will allow older
    people and people with longstanding health
    conditions
  • to live independently in their homes for longer
  • and at the same time it will save public
    resources
  • 80m Preventative Technology Grant has been
    made available to local authorities in England
    for implementing telecare over the next two years.

5
Why is it needed?
Government and other official reports calling for
telecare
  • Significant demographic, political and economic
    drivers ageing, longstanding illness and
    chronic conditions, care system capacity
  • Wider policy agenda provides impetus focus on
    capacity, chronic disease, prevention and self
    care
  • Targets. DH, Delivering C21 NHS IT Support
    (2002, reiterated by ODPM in Nov 2005) and
    Building Telecare in England (July 2005)

6
Challenges of Telecare
  • Telecare often presented as an all win
    solution, but implementation faces challenges
  • - technological, not just about re-engineering
    existing services but moving on from adding to
    the widely available social alarm technology to
    an intelligent sensor system
  • - organisational, diverse and complex service
    involving a range of stakeholders. Need for clear
    policy and strategy
  • - cost-effectiveness, requires tools for
    evaluation
  • - ethical, telecare touches on issues of
    surveillance, empowerment and control. Clear
    guidance called for when prioritising need,
    offering the service, obtaining informed consent
    and activating response protocols

7
Supporting Independence
  • Funding from EPSRC (EQUAL Programme)
  • Interdisciplinary team of academics, charitable
    housing providers and technology manufacturers
  • Overall aim is to understand the opportunities
    for and barriers to mainstreaming telecare
    services in peoples own homes
  • Study conducted in two locations
  • - South Yorkshire in mainstream housing
  • - Devon in an extra care housing scheme (the
    focus in this presentation)
  • Use of existing off the shelf technology to
    test the LSM concept.

8
History of LSM
  • The concept of LSM was developed back in the late
    1990s as
  • a non-intrusive, low cost technological solution
    to enhance care to older people
  • reassurance for carers (formal and informal)
  • proactive rather than reactive service to large
    numbers of geographically dispersed clients
  • - cuts the time needed to detect potentially
    serious problems
  • Widespread understanding right across the board
    that LSM is possible now, and can provide a basis
    for clinical assessment and intervention.

9
How LSM works
  • LSM sensors monitor peoples habitual
    domestic movements and daily activities such as
    movement around the house.
  • By constant passive monitoring of the domestic
    environment
  • integrating into an intelligent LSM system,
  • learning peoples routines
  • recognising deviations from this norm.
  • Some deviations may be interpreted as signs of
    a forthcoming crisis, in which case upon
    detecting them an alert is issued to a carer.
    Therefore the ultimate aim of LSM is to prevent a
    crisis.
  • Our study exposed a number of limitations to
    this concept of LSM. I will touch upon some of
    them in this presentation.

10
Participants profiles at the start of the
research (October 2005)
11
Data and Methodological Approach
  • Mixed research methodology
  • - Monitoring began in January 2006 and lasted
    for 10 months.
  • - Detailed floor plans prepared, taking account
    of the furniture.
  • - On average 14.8 sensors were installed in each
    of the six flats.
  • - Four rounds of in-depth interviews have been
    conducted.
  • - All six participants received regular blood
    pressure monitoring, and two participants
    received blood sugar monitoring.
  • - Half way through the project a systematic
    review of sensor output data was conducted. This
    allowed us to create a number of vignettes.
  • - Vignettes represent case studies of sensor
    activity around the time of a specific, known
    event in the life of our participants, together
    with an attempt to interpret this pattern of
    activity with the benefit of available contextual
    information.

12
Busyness
  • Busyness is a measure of movement within a
    dwelling, and a count of interactions with
    sensored objects. These interactions time tag
    aspects of routine and result in regular patterns
    that can be detected within periods of each day,
    within days of each week, monthly, annually and
    so forth.
  • Busyness is measured by normalising the overall
    sensor activity graphs by the number of sensors
    active in the particular period of time, applying
    weightings to each sensor depending on number of
    firings.
  • Busyness should not be attributed directly to
    people, but to the firing patterns of the sensors
    in their home
  • Flagging up changes in the busyness of individual
    sensors or sensor arrays that indicate
    deterioration of health or well-being.

13
Example of a Vignette Emergency Hospitalisation
  • Miss Evans is 84 years old and lives alone in a
    bedsit flat that she rents from the charitable
    housing provider. She has both vision and hearing
    impairment, epilepsy and a history of coronary
    heart disease. Her personality could be described
    as a bit of a worrier.
  • She has a fairly regular daily routine. For
    example round about lunch time she normally takes
    an afternoon nap. As she explains herself
  • I go to dinner and after dinner I have a
    little nap on the bed, not a sleep so much as to
    get my back flat because the doctor said I must
    lie flat for an hour or so during the day.

14
Sensors installed in Miss Evans flat
15
The Event Itself
  • Until the day of the crisis all of Miss Evans
    blood pressure readings were within a range
    considered normal for this individual.
  • On the 3rd of March 2006 quite out of the
    blue Miss Evans felt very ill, her blood
    pressure was very high and she was taken to
    hospital. She was discharged from hospital on the
    17th of March 2006.
  • The hospitalisation of Miss Evans is precisely
    the type of crisis event that lifestyle
    monitoring system aims to predict and prevent. In
    this case, analysis of lifestyle monitoring
    devices was done retrospectively.

16
Bed occupancy sensor
17
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18
Chair occupancy sensor
Daily firings of chair occupancy sensor
19
Hourly firings of chair occupancy sensor, 37 days
before hospitalisation
Hourly firings of chair occupancy sensor, 37 days
after hospitalisation
20
Validation of the vignette
  • Although this interpretation seems to fit in
    well with the presented picture of sensor
    activity, without some form of validation it
    remains speculation.
  • We therefore re-interviewed Miss Evans some
    weeks after she had returned from hospital, to
    see how she felt about the episode.
  • Factors emerged which suggest that it would be
    premature to attribute the change in her activity
    pattern to a change for the better in her health
    or well being.
  • - Miss Evans did not make a rapid recovery but
    rather took a long time to get better.
  • - a medication change altered her routine
  • - daily visits from care workers during the
    recovery period also altered the participants
    routine

21
From a retrospective to a predictive model
  • The construction of vignettes is a good way of
    becoming familiar with sensor output data and
    therefore it is an appropriate technique to be
    used at the exploratory and preliminary data
    analysis stages.
  • However, even when used retrospectively, the
    vignette must be used cautiously, avoiding
    over-interpretation of sensor data.
  • Even it is possible to make a retrospective link
    between busyness and the build up to a crisis, we
    cannot assume that this will automatically
    translate into a predictive approach. The build
    up to the next crisis could be different.

22
Making sense of sensors
  • In order to make sense of sensors one needs
    rich contextual information about the events and
    everyday activities of participants to set
    alongside the sensor data
  • This is crucial both at the stage of choosing the
    right LSM sensors and when interpreting their
    output
  • Obtaining such information depends on
    establishing continuous effective communication -
    a dialogue of care - which requires a rapport
    between patients and their carers.

23
Lessons for mainstream telecare
  • What are the challenges if we want to move
    towards predictive telecare?
  • Technological. Gathering and analysing data on
    LSM is currently time consuming and laborious. We
    need more sophisticated sensors, data mining and
    visualisation techniques. Intelligent decision
    making tools.
  • Organisational. Decisions will need to be made
    about which activities are monitored, who
    monitors them and which pattern of sensor firings
    represents a norm in the case of any particular
    individual.
  • Resource. Who is going to pay for the service?
    Can we measure the costs and benefits?
  • Ethical. Explaining the concept, capturing user
    wishes, and obtaining informed consent.

24
LSM Lite
  • There are potential benefits to LSM for both
    active / reactive and passive / predictive
    telecare.
  • In active mode the signals are usually clear.
    There is either an alert or there is not.
  • In passive mode the signals are both less clear
    and more open to interpretation. The real
    challenge is knowing when a weak signal indicated
    by a change in busyness is showing that something
    is going wrong.
  • In the long run, LSM will probably have to
    become much more sophisticated but in the short
    term we may need to make it simpler - LSM Lite
    - selecting one or a few key sensors to monitor,
    based on individual case histories.
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