Internet of Things. User-Centric IoT. First International Summit, IoT360 2014, Rome, Italy, October 27-28, 2014, Revised Selected Papers, Part I

Research Article

A Ubiquitous Telehealth System for the Elderly

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  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.1007/978-3-319-19656-5_23,
        author={M. Raad and Tarek Sheltami and Muhammad Deriche},
        title={A Ubiquitous Telehealth System for the Elderly},
        proceedings={Internet of Things. User-Centric IoT. First International Summit, IoT360 2014, Rome, Italy, October 27-28, 2014, Revised Selected Papers, Part I},
        proceedings_a={IOT360},
        year={2015},
        month={7},
        keywords={Telehealth Ubiquitous Electrocardiogram Arrhythmia},
        doi={10.1007/978-3-319-19656-5_23}
    }
    
  • M. Raad
    Tarek Sheltami
    Muhammad Deriche
    Year: 2015
    A Ubiquitous Telehealth System for the Elderly
    IOT360
    Springer
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-19656-5_23
M. Raad1,*, Tarek Sheltami1,*, Muhammad Deriche1,*
  • 1: King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals (KFUPM)
*Contact email: raad@kfupm.edu.sa, tarek@kfupm.edu.sa, mderiche@kfupm.edu.sa

Abstract

Chronic diseases are becoming the world’s leading causes of death and disability, and are predicted to account for almost three quarters of all deaths by 2020. A working prototype was built to capture vital signs for the elderly staying at home and deliver prompt care remotely by using wearable ECG wireless sensors. This prototype has been tested to capture data on a 24/7 basis for a number of patients at the KFUPM Medical Center. The developed system includes a suit of signal processing algorithms for the detection of severe cases of arrhythmias in elderly patients. After identifying patients with potential arrhythmia variability, an alarm system sends emergency requests to caregivers for immediate response. Our results were benchmarked against the standard MIT physiobank. The performance of the system was also tested on simulated data with very satisfactory results, and very positive feedback from users and medical practitioners.