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Plug-and-Play Medicine

A step toward letting medical devices communicate.

By David Talbot

Friday, September 18, 2009

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In a key practical step toward the long-sought goal of linking different hospital devices together to better manage patients and their care, a Boston research group has come up with a software platform for sharing information among gadgets ranging from blood-pressure cuffs to heart-lung machines.

Plug and play: Two pulse oximeters, which measure blood oxygen levels, are linked with hardware that uses data from either device to control an intravenous drug device (not shown).
Credit: CIMIT

"The vision of fully interoperable medical devices has been around for at least a quarter-century, but lack of adequate standards and lack of manufacturers' desire to foster such integration has left us in a kind of Dark Ages," says Peter Szolovits, an MIT computer scientist in the Harvard/MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, who was not involved with developing the new standards. He adds that they are "a critical component of making health-care information technology smarter, safer, and more efficient."

When doctors disconnect a heart-lung machine after finishing heart surgery, they need to turn on the ventilator quickly, or the patient will suffer brain damage. Right now, however, there is no way for the heart-lung machine to sense whether the ventilator was switched on correctly and keep running if it wasn't. Even the most high-technology medical devices used in hospitals don't "talk" to each other in the way that, say, your PC "talks" to your printer.

The new standards for the Integrated Clinical Environment (ICE)--written by a research group convened by the Center for Integration of Medicine and Innovative Technology (CIMIT), a hospital/academic consortium in Boston--consist of a set of high-level design principles. Among other things, the standard says that an ICE must include a device analogous to a jet airliner's "black box" that collects data. This black box will initially prove that integrating different systems can be safe enough to win regulatory approval. But in everyday practice, it will also be crucial to troubleshooting and improving interoperability. The standard also says that there must be only one overarching algorithm that interprets data from all connected machines to avoid conflicting instructions or warnings; and that if one piece fails, the failure must not be able to spread to other parts of the system.

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"This is about building a comprehensive platform, like the Web, that allows the global community to innovate and build cool things on top of it that improve patient safety," says Julian Goldman, director of CIMIT's Medical Device Interoperability Program, who led the group that developed the standards, which will be published this fall by the standards body ASTM International.

"Any technologically sophisticated person would assume that if you are receiving a potent intravenous medication in a hospital, and at the same time your blood pressure is being measured by an automated cuff every 15 minutes, that we have a way to [automatically] stop that medication infusion if it causes your blood pressure starts to fall or rise rapidly," says Goldman, who is also an anesthesiologist at Massachusetts General Hospital and medical director of Partners HealthCare Biomedical Engineering, "but it's impossible to do that today."

Comments

  • Plug-and-play medicine
    Along with the plug-and-play technologies named in the article we need at-home on and in the body portable monitoring.

    All of my medical perimeters could be continuously monitored as I sit here in this seat, at home, in front of my computer, using fixed/wireless smart systems connected as needed, directly through telecommunications to my doctor, period.  In many general medical conditions, smart systems being developed can analyze - for now with telecommunicated infor - and provide care information and prescriptions, etc.

    If the present for profit Health Care system ever expects to save money it will be when patients stay out of the doctor's office for an extra day, week, month,years.  Additionally, we need to break up large conglomerate health care systems, or by other mean, improve competition.  This could mean fewer doctors needing volume to make money with additional non-expert - like nursing - health care.....

    Nonetheless, I beleive that, due to coming advances in science, ultimately we will end up with single payer, and then, free basic medical care despite remarks like 'If you believe that medical care is expensive, just wait until medical care is free' remarks...."www.drwarpenstein.com". 
    Rate this comment: 12345

    wndosngstr
    09/19/2009
    Posts:1
  • Excellent long-over-due idea
    Plug & play has been around quite a while and proven its value and reliability. This is the kind of technology application - and establishment of inter-operability and communication protocols - that is long over-due and especially important in an operating theatre - definitely a data-rich environment. This is the sort of thing that the President's medical "best-practices" advisory group should be examining closely. I applaud this work.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    asiwel
    09/24/2009
    Posts:8
    Avg Rating:
    4/5

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