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The Future of Patient Monitoring - Contactless Monitoring of Patients for Safety, Efficiency, and Gains Passed

Tuesday May 14, 2024 13:00 - 14:00 F2

Lecturer: Ole Kristian Forstrønen Thu

Track: Emerging technologies

The landscape of healthcare is rapidly evolving, with patient safety and the efficiency of patient monitoring gaining increased importance. Traditional spot-based patient surveillance methods have notable limitations, and there is substantial documentation on the benefits of more continuous monitoring approaches. Vitalthings, a Norwegian health technology company, is at the forefront of this evolution, developing contactless monitoring solutions that significantly enhance patient safety, operational efficiency, and overall cost-effectiveness.


Vitalthings' pioneering solution offers continuous and contactless monitoring. This innovative technology operates effectively across various patient positions and through different materials, such as clothing and bedding, eliminating the need for direct sensor contact with the body. The technology, which is part of the innovative partnership with Autoscore at St. Olavs University Hospital addresses fundamental challenges of traditional monitoring methods.

Continuous monitoring presents considerable advantages, including decreased mortality risk, diminished need for intensive care, fewer rapid response team interventions, and shorter hospital stays. While global studies highlight substantial benefits for both patients and hospital economics, access to patient monitoring remains limited. Contactless monitoring, however, streamlines the process with automatic activation, saving healthcare personnel valuable time and providing equitable monitoring for all patient groups, notably those with dementia or psychiatric conditions. Furthermore, this contactless approach is not only sustainable but also cost-effective, thanks to the elimination of consumables and reduced disinfection requirements.

Dr. Thu will elaborate on how the continuous data harvested by this system serves as a foundation for future research and the development of AI models. This shift towards more proactive healthcare modalities, empowered by enhanced patient and staff safety, paves the way for the integration of AI into predictive medicine.

The implementation of Vitalthings' contactless monitoring technology signifies a substantial advancement towards proactive healthcare, emphasizing the role of continuous data and AI in shaping future medical practices.

Language

English

Topic

Future Health and Social Care

Seminar type

Pre-recorded + On-site

Lecture type

Extended 55 min

Objective of lecture

Tools for implementation

Level of knowledge

Introductory

Target audience

Management/decision makers
Politicians
Organizational development
Purchasers/acquisitions/eco nomy/HR
Technicians/IT/Developers
Researchers
Students
Care professionals
Healthcare professionals
Patient/user organizations

Keyword

Actual examples (good/bad)
Benefits/effects
Education (verification)
Patient centration
Innovation/research
Test/validation
Patient safety
Usability

Conference

Vitalis

Lecturers

Profile image for Ole Kristian Forstrønen Thu

Ole Kristian Forstrønen Thu Lecturer

Chief Medical Officer, Vitalthings; Anesthesiologist, ph.d., Stavanger University Hospital
Vitalthings

Ole Kristian Thu is an anesthesiologist with a ph.d. in medicine. He has a diverse clinical background both from pre-hospital-, military-, primary- and specialized healthcare.
He's working at Stavanger University Hospital with anesthesiology and intensive care medicine, and as Chief Medical Officer in VitalThings. He is passionate about patient safety and medical technology, with a continuous focus on both the patient and end-user experience. As a former enterprise union representative, he also recognizes that the increased complexity and number of patients cant be continually met with increased budgets and staffing. In his opinion, technological innovations play an increasingly important role in our modernized healthcare and related challenges.