duration of first 2 to 3 weeks, with a sampling period
of once every 15 minutes. Battery should last long
enough without any need for charging or replacement.
This calls for an ultra low power design to meet the
requirement of longer battery life.
1.1.4 Robustness
The device needs to unobtrusively operate for several
days. During the operation in remote regions, manual
intervention for maintenance or repair is difficult to
provide. Hence the device should be robust enough to
cater to challenges like shock, vibration, and should
not get reset accidentally. It should be hermetically
sealed to protect the electronics from getting dam-
aged in case liquids seep in during sterilisation or due
to contact with body fluids (e.g sweat, urine, faeces,
etc.). Moreover, the device should be adjustable so
that it can used on neonates of different abdominal
girths, it should be aesthetically pleasant and should
be baby friendly.
Detailed description of the solution to these re-
quirements and challenges is provided in section 2.3
1.2 Related Works
In India, remote rural health monitoring is being en-
abled by many companies and government agencies.
For instance, in (Neurosynaptics, 2002), the com-
pany has developed a health kiosk and system called
ReMeDi, which is deployed at the primary health cen-
ter. The Kiosk allows a number of basic health tests
to be conducted, the results of which are communi-
cated over the cellular network to a central repository
which keeps track of patient health data. This system
is in use in a number of rural districts in Bihar and
parts of Karnataka. Many other similar systems are
being developed and deployed by various NGOs and
startups across India.
Studies indicate that monitoring certain basic pa-
rameters, like temperature, could help indicate im-
pending problems and hence with timely interven-
tion, perhaps the mortality can be reduced. In this re-
gard, an innovative product, for keeping babies warm,
has been developed by a startup called Embrace (Em-
brace, 2012).
In a related work, authors in(Chen et al., 2010)
describe some sensors and packaging which has been
developed for monitoring new borns. The sensors
are embedded in a smart jacket, with careful attention
paid to the baby friendliness of the design.
Another device(iThermometer, 2012) addresses a
similar application where temperature of body can
be measured and transmitted wirelessly to an android
platform based device.The device has a battery life of
only 48 hours and a relatively larger size as compared
to our design.
The authors in (Isetta et al., 2013), report an in-
ternet based health monitoring system for newborns.
The parents fill up an online form with some data
about their babies regularly. These include: Weight,
body temperature, sleeping patterns, skin color, feed-
ing etc. The remote nursing staff monitor these pa-
rameters and provide timely advice. The authors con-
ducted a clinical research study for the efficacy of this
system and found that it helped reduce the number of
visits to the hospital by a factor of 3 for the babies be-
ing monitored via this system, as compared to a con-
trol group, which did not use it. This study encour-
ages us to develop automated monitoring techniques
like in (Chen et al., 2010) which will be more reliable
and efficient than manually entering the data.
2 SYSTEM DESIGN
This section describes the design decisions involved
in developing the hardware platform and the proto-
type device
2.1 Wireless Communication
There are many low-power wireless technologies like
Bluetooth low-energy(BLE), Bluetooth classic, ANT,
ZigBee, Wi-Fi, Nike+, IrDA, and the near-field com-
munications (NFC) standards currently being em-
ployed in the field of healthcare.
For our application, the following critical key pa-
rameters drove the selection of the wireless interface:
ultra-low-power, low cost, small physical size, appli-
cation’s network topology requirements and security
of communication.
The authors in (Artem et al., 2013) do a power
consumption analysis of BLE, ZigBee and ANT sen-
sor nodes in a cyclic sleep scenario and find BLE to
be the most energy efficient. We believe that in the
next few years, millions of mobiles and computers
will support BLE, thus enabling BLE based sensors to
utilize these as gateways to the internet ((Alf Helge,
2010) and (Gomez et al., 2012)). We already see
commercial products with BLE like FitBit (Hawley E
et al., 2012), Pebble Watch and Hot Watch, and hence
it encourages us to leverage the advantages of em-
ploying BLE as the short-range wireless communica-
tion technology for connecting the sensor to the gate-
way.
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