Abstract:
Medical devices in hospitals and other clinical settings are not yet networked with each other. This leads to compartmentalization and siloing of information, false posit...Show MoreMetadata
Abstract:
Medical devices in hospitals and other clinical settings are not yet networked with each other. This leads to compartmentalization and siloing of information, false positive alarms where stand-alone devices are not aware of the patient's context, and worsened patient outcomes when novel, life-saving algorithms cannot even be prototyped. In response to this situation, we have developed an open source implementation of the Integrated Clinical Environment (ICE) standard ASTM 2761-09(2013). The platform consists of software device adapters for medical devices (including anesthesia machines, ventilators, and patient monitors), OMG DDS standard middleware, and demonstration applications. Applications can be built on this platform to implement smart alarms, physiologic closed-loop control algorithms, data visualization, and clinical research data collection. The ICE standard defines an architecture for building a safe patient-centric Integrated Clinical Environment. It defines roles for device adapters, a network controller that mediates traffic, a supervisor capable of hosting applications, a data logger for forensic analysis, and external interfaces to hospital resources such as an EHR, ADT, or pharmacy system. Over the last 8 years, working with a broad team of collaborators, we have built numerous prototype medical distributed systems. These have ranged from a deterministic, hard real-time network implemented on custom FPGA hardware to approaches built on web services. There exist many different middlewares, and our requirements allow us to choose an appropriate one. An ideal middleware would support an abstract API that would permit many instantiations on varying hardware and software platforms. Safe interoperability requires that participants on the network all play by the same rules. DDS was chosen as the middleware for this prototype because it supports the expression of a wide range of quality of service parameters, allowing us to support a variety of clinical sce...
Date of Conference: 14-17 April 2014
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 26 June 2014
ISBN Information: