Technological Platform for the Prevention and Management of Healthcare Associated Infections and Outbreaks

Hospital acquired infections are infections that occur in patients during hospitalization, which were not present at the time of admission. They are among the most common adverse events in healthcare around the world, leading to increased mortality and morbidity rates, prolonged hospitalization peri...

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Veröffentlicht in:arXiv.org 2020-09
Hauptverfasser: Bocicor, Maria Iuliana, Dascălu, Maria, Gaczowska, Agnieszka, Hostiuc, Sorin, Moldoveanu, Alin, Molina, Antonio, Molnar, Arthur-Jozsef, Negoi, Ionuţ, Racoviţă, Vlad
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Hospital acquired infections are infections that occur in patients during hospitalization, which were not present at the time of admission. They are among the most common adverse events in healthcare around the world, leading to increased mortality and morbidity rates, prolonged hospitalization periods and considerable financial burden on both hospitals and patients. Preventive guidelines and regulations have been devised, however compliance to these is frequently poor and there is much room for improvement. This paper presents the prototype of an extensible, configurable cyber-physical system, developed under European Union funding, that will assist in the prevention of hospital infections and outbreaks. Integrating a wireless sensor network for the surveillance of clinical processes with configurable monitoring software built around a workflow engine as key component, our solution detects deviations from established hygiene practices and provides real-time information and alerts whenever an infection risk is discovered. The platform is described from both hardware and software perspective, with emphasis on the wireless network's elements as well as the most important software components. Furthermore, two clinical workflows of different complexity, which are included in the system prototype are detailed. The finalized system is expected to facilitate the creation and automated monitoring of clinical workflows that are associated with over 90% of hospital infections.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2009.02502