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AUGMENTED REALITY AND HOSPITALIZED NEWBORN SAFETY
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Journal of Health & Medical Informatics

ISSN: 2157-7420

Open Access

AUGMENTED REALITY AND HOSPITALIZED NEWBORN SAFETY


4th International Conference on Medical Informatics & Telehealth

October 6-7, 2016 | London, UK

Sarah Ben Othman and Slim Hammadi

Ecole Centrale de Lille, France

Posters & Accepted Abstracts: J Health Med Informat

Abstract :

At the hospital care of a newborn, the iatrogenic risk may be related to the specific side effects of drugs, but also to errors during preparation (dilution error, calculation error, error due to a combination of two incompatible products from a physico-chemical point of view) and/or during the administration of products (dose error, administration of a non-prescription medication) committed by the nursing staff. These errors are common and constitute a real concern of medical teams. The steps of preparation and drug administration are particularly at risk. The majority of administration errors is related to the human factor1. They are associated with increased stress among nurses. These errors can have consequences for the patient, professionals, health institutions and health insurance. Many studies have proposed and evaluated measures to limit the occurrence of these errors. The research is now shifting focus towards multimodal approaches integrating traceability of operations 2. However, these measures struggle to be integrated into daily clinical practice. Hence, the introduction of new technologies in the health care system must be considered. To avoid these errors, we propose to design and develop an innovative decision support system based on the technology of Augmented Reality, built into intelligent glasses freeing the user's hands. This system ensures traceability, usability, dynamism, security and transparency for better management of patient medical care. The application implemented on the augmented reality glasses have been tested by 7 nurses. Most of them estimate that the glasses enable them to gain time and to reduce the mistakes while preparing drugs.

Biography :

Email: ben.othman.sara@hotmail.fr

Google Scholar citation report
Citations: 2128

Journal of Health & Medical Informatics received 2128 citations as per Google Scholar report

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