
@article{ref1,
title="Development and alarm threshold evaluation of a side rail integrated sensor technology for the prevention of falls",
journal="International journal of medical informatics",
year="2010",
author="Hilbe, Johannes and Schulc, Eva and Linder, Barbara and Them, Christa",
volume="79",
number="3",
pages="173-180",
abstract="<p>OBJECTIVE: Patient falls constitute a serious problem both for the persons fallen and for the institutions involved. Bed-exit alarm systems are used to reduce patient falls. Existing bed-exit alarm systems have several disadvantages depending on the technology used. As in &quot;Evaluation of Bed-Exit Alarms&quot; stated, restless, light weighted, uncooperative, incontinent and confused patients require different systems. The aim of this work is to present the research and development process of the integrated, universally applicable BUCINATOR bed-exit-alarm system. METHODS: The use-case technique was applied to capture the functional requirements for the development of the new integrated bed-exit alarm system. An experimental study was carried out to collect data regarding preliminary sensitivity and specificity for alarm set-off. RESULTS: Major identified requirements for an optimized bed-exit alarm system were usability, wide range usage, low costs, hygiene factors, integration into nursing beds and nurse call systems and an adequate alarm/false alarm ratio with early alarm trigger functionality. On the basis of the criteria mentioned above, a sensor system was developed, comprising tubes with an air-filled passageway attached on the top of side rails. These tubes are coupled via lines to transducers which trigger an alarm when a predetermined level of pressure is reached. Both the preliminary sensitivity (96.0%) and the specificity (>/=95.5%) of the trigger level indicate a satisfactory alarm/false alarm ratio which is now to be evaluated in a clinical trial. CONCLUSIONS: After experimental testing, BUCINATOR shows great potential to be a reliable bed-exit alarm system. In general, bed-exit alarm systems with extended features could play a major role in ambient assisted living technologies. LIMITATIONS: Besides the theoretical evaluation, it will be imperative to perform more tests and to gather more data about the effect on fall rates and resulting injuries.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1386-5056",
doi="10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2009.12.004",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2009.12.004"
}