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Getinge and partners showcase connectivity solutions for the quiet ICU of the future

Press releases may be edited for formatting or style | September 09, 2020 Emergency Medicine
GOTHENBURG, Sweden, Sept. 9, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Together with leading industry partners, Getinge is showcasing innovative connectivity solutions for creating a more quiet and healing environment for the intensive care unit (ICU). By distributing audible alarms outside patient rooms, ICUs will become calmer for patients, family members and provide caregivers a more efficient way of addressing alarms.

The modern ICU uses a large number of medical devices that generate independent alarms. Without coordination, this can result in a cacophony of alarms causing unnecessary anxiety for patients and their families.

"Our aim is to help hospitals make ICU bedsides quieter by safely moving the alarms outside patient rooms," says David Pitts, Clinical SME, Integrated Therapy Solutions Getinge. "Distributing alarms to the right caregiver at the right time saves patients and their family members from worrying about alarm disturbances and improves the working conditions in stressful ICU environments."

The quiet ICU demo concept created by Getinge and its partners highlights the importance of establishing a standard for safely distributing and managing alarms between solutions provided by different medical device suppliers.

"Instead of alarming separately at the patient's bedside, each device is part of a network intended to coordinate and, if needed, escalate those alarms directly to the appropriate caregiver," David Pitts explains.

These groundbreaking solutions are expected to reach the health care market in the years to come. The concept is demonstrated in the Interoperability Showcase video "Trauma Recovery in the Quiet ICU" available on the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) website.


SOURCE Getinge

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