A Distributed Elderly Healthcare System
S. Nourizadeh
1,2
, C. Deroussent
2
, Y. Q. Song
1
and J. P. Thomesse
1
1
LORIA Research Laboratory - INPL Nancy, France
2
MEDeTIC Association – Colmar, France
Abstract. The recent advances of ICT allow developing new generation of tele-
homecare systems to enable elderly health monitoring and management and
ease their daily life. Such a system can reduce the amount of admissions to
hospital, facilitate more efficient clinical visits, and may replace a hospital stay
by living at home. In this paper we present a patient oriented distributed tele-
homecare system, by which we created a new concept of building smart home
by integrating telemedicine and home automation systems.
1 Introduction
As the population grows older, people becomes increasingly dependent as their
sensory, motor and cognitive physiological health capacities deteriorate; these age-
related changes, are amplified if they are accompanied by pathological conditions
(e.g. osteoporosis, osteoarthritis) that are common in the elderly population. Most
European countries are now facing an urgent requirement to provide appropriate
retired home environments solutions for these citizens and allow them to play a role
in our society. Elderly requiring healthcare services must move to distant medical
centers and this is often not feasible due to their state. Elderly tele-healthcare systems
can be achieved using advanced communication networks and Internet technologies.
These technologies have a key role in the development of a telehealth system and
smart homes.
Healthcare integrated smart home allows the tenants and their family members to
benefit from a safe home environment with activities and services accompaniment for
their daily steps. In order to reach that goal, we aimed at several technologies and
implemented them in a demonstration prototype apartment. Several issues on
objectives and contributions of technologies were stressed out [1]:
Enhance independent living with cognitive assistive systems [2].
Provide safety and security to inhabitants with the help of medical services
supervision; monitor general activities of the occupants [3] and monitor unusual
routines or abnormal behaviors that reach dangerous levels [4].
Improve social contact and cultural activities within the elderly surrounding thanks
to communication systems and appropriate equipment [5].
Engage medical actors to use computerized systems in order to ease information
processing and traceability.
Nourizadeh S., Deroussent C., Song Y. and Thomesse J. (2009).
A Distributed Elderly Healthcare System.
In Proceedings of the 1st International Workshop on Mobilizing Health Information to Support Healthcare-related Knowledge Work, pages 59-68
DOI: 10.5220/0001814600590068
Copyright
c
SciTePress
For these reasons, elderly tele-homecare, videoconferencing and tele-consultation
systems have been attempted by many researchers. Many telemedicine and e-health
systems are being developed and many innovations and ICT-based emerging
solutions are close to be operational, nevertheless the expected take-up did not occur
yet, since proposed systems and their targeted medical benefits are certainly too
segmented and disconnected the ones from the others. In addition, most of existing
products and services in this field rely on proprietary technologies, which is a
substantial obstacle to the development of complementary services or applications,
and thus of the market. Consequently, population like elderly, disabled people or
chronically ill people, who are often suffering from co-existing troubles, are not
encouraged to dare benefiting from ICT and innovations, as available solutions are
not complete, not compatible the ones with the others, not scalable, neither end-to-end
nor comprehensive, and remain then unaffordable for someone who would try to
subscribe to each relevant service covering a more or less significant part of its
medical and social needs, without ensuring a global management of the daily
problems. The current developments and innovations are limited in terms of
commercial and operational perspectives and suffer from certain phenomena:
The fragmentation of experimentation, projects and products did not yet give birth
to any efficient and affordable holistic solution that could fulfill the various
targeted beneficiaries and users’ expectations.
The development costs and R&D expenses required for a proper adaptation to each
community of users and beneficiaries’ needs make investment very high, as time-
to-market delays are uncertain and no business model has been successfully
assessed yet in this domain.
The accompanying measures, at institutional, ethical, legal, financial and
organizational levels remain insufficient, which prevent the development and the
sustainability of such assistance and at-home monitoring services.
Finally, the population is neither confident nor familiar enough with these
innovation-based solutions, especially in such a medical or health-related purpose,
although their development requires that they become a natural component of the
medical and social environment and infrastructure.
2 State of the Art
A telehealth application is a complex system that requires the integration of various
sub-systems and applications. As we said, nowadays, many telehealth and e-Home
applications are available; however, it is difficult to find the system that matches
exactly the end-user requirements.
In [6] the authors presented a teleconsultation system. This system is based on web
technologies and the user accesses the system over the Internet or an intranet. The
system therefore is designed to do a teleconsultation, and it is not integrated with the
other healthcare modules or an automatic analysis of patient’s health situation.
TOPCARE [7] is a telehealth system for mobile care and homecare of high risk
patients, elderly and care needing people. The system is an open telecare platform
solutions for telemedicine services. The overall objective of TOPCARE is to develop
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technical devices and telecommunication structures and to lay the organizational
groundwork for bringing co-operative health care services into the home of patients.
System comprises a telematic homecare platform (THP) backbone, the development
of telematic home stations (THS) and health professional stations (HPS) and a
communication server that will manage the network administration, the health
professional registration at the THS, the device communication, and the Internet
access. Therefore, in TOPCARE, interaction is limited to only the clients having
TeleHealth Client (THC) module.
The Interactive and cooperative tele-monitoring of the dialyzing at home
(DIATELIC) is a system of tele-monitoring of dialyzing at home by the technology of
DPCA (Dialyze Peritoneal Continue Ambulant) [8]. It was developed by LORIA in
cooperation with the doctors of the ALTIR (Lorraine Association of Treatment of
Renal Insufficiency) and a doctor advice of the Health insurance. Research works
drove to the Diatelic system. This system is only designed specially for the dialyze
patients.
The AFIRM team of the laboratory TIMC-IMAG in Grenoble developed a project
called System of Information and Communication of the Inteligent Home for Health
(SIC - HITCH) [9]. Objective is to monitoring the patient in his home with sensors
installed in his home, by triggering off alarms in the appropriate urgent centers, in
case of feelings of faintness, in falls or in abnormal situations. This system is an
experimentation and simulation platform.
3 System Architecture
The requirements presented in the previous sections and remaining obstacles or
brakes make the design of monitoring and assistance tools quite complex, as each
pathology or disability generates its own set of requirements and constraints. Such
context increases the need for the development of innovative global ICT-based
solution allowing to implement personalized and person-centric care process and
tools, which can evolve with the users’ medical and social and physical evolution, and
which can compile the various collection and analysis of data to ensure a reliable and
sound diagnosis, medication and evaluation of the medical and social state of the
person.
To reach these advantages, we developed a patient oriented tele-homecare system.
By a user requirement analysis, we propose a Multi-tiered architecture (see Fig. 1).
The elements of this architecture are:
Medical Sensors (and / or Body Sensor Network (BSN)): This part consists of the
medical instrumentation important to patients medical monitoring. As the studies
show [1], for 65% of the elderly, this is not acceptable to attach theme any sensor,
for this reason we use a noninvasive medical monitoring, but for the exceptional
cases that we need to have a real-time monitoring of their medial state, we use
Body Sensor Network. This network consists of very small portable devices
equipped with a variety of sensors for medical monitoring, patient localization and
identification.
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Environmental Sensors and Home automation sensors network: This network must
include sensors unfolded in environment (rooms, halls, WC …). These sensors can
include those of the temperature, humidity, movement, acoustics, the camera, etc.
Gateway: It may be the mini PC installed in each home, or a mobile system such as
a PDA. It connects body sensor network and also environmental sensors like home
automation sensors and actuators to the Internet. It also includes intermediate
receivers, assuring an efficient data transmission. In this part we have some
preprocessing of the data received from medical and home automation sensors, to
detect urgency anomalies.
XML data exchange by using web services technology: This system uses web
services to interact between the client and the server, as shown in Fig. 2 This
system has intention to address the need to standardize the transmission of
physiological data, by using the platform independence of web services and the
structural independence of XML in the development of a web service for data
transmission, processing and storage of physiological data for the service of tele-
monitoring. By using web services, the system requires minimal additional
technological elements and minimal technical requirements of support.
Graphical User Interfaces. We designed a very easy-to-use graphical user interface.
This interface is commendable by using a PDA or TV remote controller.
Fig. 1. System’s general architecture.
Fig. 2. XML Data exchange.
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Fig. 3.
Different platforms.
This system interfaces to healthcare providers, doctors, care-givers and the medical
call centers (See Fig. 3) and also is integrated with a mobile platform for the occupant
to remote control his home and another mobile platform for the doctors and nurses to
view the state of their patients. Typically they will receive an alarm in case of a health
problem of their patients.This figure shows that the system is integrated with vital
sign monitoring devices and sensors. The system has possibility of integrating the
system with the wireless devices and sensors with different communication methods
such as Bluetooth, ZigBee, USB and the other technologies. The medical data are
store in the database aromatically; without any manual action. We aim in this project
to integrate ZigBee protocol with home automation protocols, such as KNX, IHC.
Among the many wireless technologies, ZigBee is one of the most promising ones for
home automation; a wireless home networking system can be configured using
ZigBee alone [10].
4 Functions and Features
The main objective of this project is to develop a universal user-oriented healthcare
system to allow elderly to be medically monitored and assisted in their home. The
benefits and added-values of the proposed system and service are to offer a
continuous medical monitoring of the person's health combined with a permanent
watch of the immediate dangers in the person's home: the automated alert system will
contact a video call center able to evaluate the emergency level of the alert and to
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contact the most relevant assistance (like relatives, doctors, carers or emergency
services). The continuous follow-up of the evolution of the medical state allows
detecting automatically the potential deterioration of his/her health, thanks to
biomedical sensors adapted to the person's specific pathologies, and thanks to
actimetry and situation detection systems. The automated alert system will then send
an alarm to the supporting call center in case of deterioration of the health parameters
or detected immediate dangers, like fire and flood. The service will also ensure an
automated monitoring and alert system for the detection of falls and abnormal
behavior according to the localization, activity, condition and habits of the person.
This solution's advantage is to propose a global system, accessible from anywhere,
displaying an adapted remote sensing service combined with interactive
telecommunications and an automated alert system. The innovative feature of the
system regard two main axis: the high level technological integration of several
innovative modules to be interconnected and correlated, on the hand, and the
challenging conception of an adapted and sustainable service from end-to-end, with
the overall management of the value chain involving the industrials – who develop,
adapt and integrate technical products and services- the service providers and
operators – who define and implement new models and structures for the delivery of
services from the call center up to the distribution of the offer, and finally, the users
and beneficiaries of such services, including the patient, its carers and relatives – who
integrate this new habits and tools into their daily life and environment and provide
their feedback on each brick of the overall solution and its concrete organization.
These two main innovative issues resulted into a real challenge in terms of services,
as to whole project’s conception involves the users and the involved actors, so as to
well define and adapt each element to turn into a success factor in terms of
acceptance.
4.1 Technological Innovation
The technological innovative activities and technical challenges addressed in the
system are as follows:
4.1.1 Distributed Patient Record
As shown in Fig. 3, the patient record has a distributed architecture, and we have a
local database in each client computer. We used a distributed patient record because
in distributed database architecture the data is not stored entirely at a single physical
location. Instead, it is spread across a network of computers that are geographically
dispersed and connected via communications links. We have therefore a large
database capacity and incremental growth, and like all distributed databases, we have
a reliable, available and flexible database. The most important advantage of a
distributed database for our system is that a distributed database allows faster local
queries and can reduce network traffic.
In this system, in each client computer we have a pre-processing of patient’s data
to detect the eventual emergency problems.
This distributed database architecture
helps to early detection of emergency problems, that means by checking the local
database, if the data from healthcare devices are outside the ranges defined in their
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care plan, or if the data have not been received when expected, the system will trigger
an alarm that may result in an automated connection with a medical call centre.
On the other hand, by using the data from home automation sensor and medical
devices, the application stored in the web server, will analyse the medical record by
using intelligent methods like Fuzzy Logic or other more complex cognitive systems,
to find the potential health problem. By detecting a problem, the system will trigger
an alarm that may result in an automated data transmission to a doctor.
4.1.2 Activity Monitoring by Home Automation System and with/without
BSN
The system gives not only to the patients a full control of Home automation devices,
by using system’s simplified interface (Fig. 4) but also generates the alerts by using
home automation sensors, which allow an indoor localisation of the beneficiary and
can, thus, propose a fall detection service generating alerts. The system allows doctors
or healthcare providers to measure the physical activities of elderly. The system uses
a more passive method. It senses a person’s presence in a room by home automation
sensors installed throughout the living areas, such as motion and presence detectors,
light, magnetic and temperature sensors. Activity patterns are then analyzed in the
local computer for unusual behavior in activities and also to fall detection, which use
an intelligent method by using Fuzzy Logic. All the results save in a database and the
system in its learning period will use this database to person’s behavior modelling to
reduce number of false alerts.
Fig. 4. Home automation interface.
4.1.3 Video Conferencing and Tele-consulting
Tele-Healthcare is related to offer health care services over Internet or a wide area
network, and in this domain, videoconferencing is one of the important solutions,
allowing real-time interaction between patients and the Doctors. The offered system is
integrated with a simplified and user-friendly videoconference system which is
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adapted to use in elderly tele-Healthcare. This sub system is used to have a video
meeting by the families and also to request an online consulting; in this case the in the
first step, the patient requests a medical visit by connecting to videoconferencing
system. System sends a message to doctor and loads patient’s medical record. Doctor
joins the conference and by ending the consultation, fills a form and saves it to
medical record and ends the consulting. Finally, the system creates a billing and sends
it to patient. Patient can view the billing in his interface and pay it online.
4.1.4 Integration with Other Home or Health Systems
Integration of several innovative modules into a global and interoperable network of
networks and systems is a grate innovative point in our system. The client side system
is a media centre module to facilitate usage of TV and easy access to video and music
sources. Figure 5 shows the client side system architecture. In this system, we used a
modular architecture to facilitate integrating of the optional module and also to
provide an easy procedure of updating and maintenance.
Fig. 5. Client side atchitecture.
5 Conclusions and Discussion
In this paper, we have presented a distributed system to support remote medical
consultations and elderly management and homecare across global wide area
networks and heterogeneous platforms.
A flat is entirely equipped to act as demonstrator and as laboratory and our system
is under final testing there. We use this flat to evaluate our system and also the
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different algorithm that we proposed during this project, the algorithms like clustering
and indoor localization in sensor networks [11] and fault management in these
networks.
By using this system, MEDeTIC (www.medetic.com) , a non-profit organization,
offers a new concept of building smart homes by using telemedicine and home
automation, named in French “Maisons Vill’Âge®”. The first houses are in building
with basic implements of data acquisition and human-machine interface.
In this type of systems, several challenges need to be addressed. The technological
challenges regard the generic features of the dynamic database, of the wireless sensor
networks, of the different supporting platforms, of the video call centre, and web
services, to allow a flexible and smooth interaction among those items and to
anticipate further additional functionalities, interacting devices, and so on. In this
respect, the methodology of specifications, development and integration of the
technological features must be realized with a major concern for some important
concepts, like: Interoperability, Scalability, Evolution and customization according to
the users’ medical and social profiles and needs.
On the other hand the design and integration effort for the technical and R&D
activities of the project focus on the design of services and interfaces ensuring a
maximum level of natural understanding on the way to use them, that is to say with an
enhanced effort on the prerequisite and experimentation feedback’s of the users who
are suffering from chronic conditions and are not familiar- and sometimes reluctant-
with ICT and innovation-based devices and systems. Ergonomic interface,
accessibility, scalability and evolutionary solution according to the evolution of the
users’ needs are the important aspect of development.
Another important point is QoS (Quality of Service) requirements, like availability
and response time. As the healthcare industry is turning to information technology to
help solve its business issues, specially provide to quality patient care services, it is
important to develop QoS specification in distributed health information systems [12].
Unlike traditional systems, many non-end-to-end mission-critical applications
envisioned for healthcare systems, which are complex systems, because in these
systems, we can find different subsystems, such as, wireless sensor networks, LANs,
software platforms, home automation systems, mobile systems, Internet… that require
different QoS requirements on the system, and these requirements pose unprecedented
challenges in the area of QoS support in healthcare systems.
Our first study shows that all the healthcare professionals have a positive attitude
toward dedicated means for ICT practical application (50% “totally agree”, 33.3%
“strongly agree” and 16.6% “lightly agree”).
Majority of interviewed elderly residents,
in this study, declare not knowing what would be their family attitude toward ICT use
(45.83%); 37.5% think that their family would be favourable to ICT use and 16.67% think
that the family would be unfavourable to ICT use, but this study with the projected family
attitudes of elderly people shows that the limitations experienced in everyday life do not
lead to a favourable or unfavourable category of ICT user [1].
Any failure or lack of performance on the system which could not be tackled in a
reasonable delay may have some damageable consequences on the solutions’
acceptance and development potential: the confidence is a basic and elementary factor
of acceptance or reject, such incident could also generate a psychological defiance
towards ICT’s in general and towards such innovative assistance and monitoring
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services. For these raisons, as our future work, a middleware will be developed to
give a dynamic and intelligent QoS to the system.
Due to the results of this first study, definition and revision of planned applications
(scenarios improvement), behavioural intention and acceptance of designed implemented
solutions and finally actual usage and acceptance evaluation will be our future work.
References
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http://.gerhome.cstb.fr
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