Monitor Alarm Fatigue Allevation By SuperAlarms - Predictive Combination Of Alarms
·Improved alarm management and enhanced patient safety
Medical monitoring
Researchers at UCLA have developed an alarm data mining method to automatically mine collections of raw bedside physiological monitor alarms, or event markers from other medical devices to create a set of predictive combinations of single encoded alarms, which is termed SuperAlarm. Extracted patterns arising from a combination of different single alarms can be used to predict certain adverse event, such as blue code events. Bedside caregivers will then be prompted with SuperAlarm for a deteriorating patient.
Background Bedside monitoring in critical care units and emergency rooms involves multimodal monitors that simultaneously measure and display relevant vital parameters, allowing for continuous monitoring of a patient and informing medical staff of the changes in general condition of the patient. However, frequent false alarms not only create annoying distraction but also can cause alarm fatigue for bedside caregivers so that attentions to critical alarms are missed, raising serious patient safety concerns. False alarms can be caused either due to noise and artifacts in signals or by inappropriate alarming criteria that are too generic and sensitive. Most of the time, only a small percentage of alarms have been found to be true positive and clinically relevant in a medical ICU and an emergency room setting. Therefore, it is imperative to develop strategies to improve patient monitor alarm generation and management. Related Materials Tech ID/UC Case 27580/2011-719-0 Related Cases 2011-719-0
USA
