Wireless Emergency Telemedicine System for Patients Tracking

  • Dr. K. Gouthami, Dr. Sakhamuri Suryanarayana

Abstract

Nowadays, remote human services frameworks have received increasing attention in the most recent decade, which explains why intelligent frameworks with physiological signal checking for e-medicinal services are a rapidly developing area of research and development. This examination thus receives a framework that incorporates consistent collection and assessment of various imperative signs, long haul medicinal services, and a cell association with a clinical focus in an emergency situation, and it moves all gained raw information by means of the internet in a typical situation. This framework is capable of continuously obtaining four distinct physiological signs, such as the ECG, SpO2, temperature, and circulatory strain, which can then be transferred to a clever information examination plan to analyze anomalous heartbeats for the purpose of investigating potential interminable illnesses.

In addition, the suggested framework includes a kind web interface that allows healthcare professionals to monitor prompt heartbeat signals for remote therapy while on the job. When an unexpected event occurs or the request for continuous presentation of basic signals is granted, every single physiological sign will be transferred to a distant clinical server as soon as possible over both mobile phone networks and the internet, as described above. Information may also be transferred to a relative's cell phone or a specialist's phone via the Global Positioning System (GPRS). A model of such a framework has been successfully developed and implemented, and it will provide our general public with exclusive expectations of human services at a far lower cost than is now the case.

Published
2020-10-31
How to Cite
Dr. K. Gouthami, Dr. Sakhamuri Suryanarayana. (2020). Wireless Emergency Telemedicine System for Patients Tracking . Design Engineering, 1019-1030. Retrieved from http://www.thedesignengineering.com/index.php/DE/article/view/6189
Section
Articles