How are Digital Health Technologies & IoT helping prevent the spread of Covid19?
Covid19 has quickly became the biggest global health emergency in a generation. Multiple countries have gone into mandatory lockdown with medical authorities & governments worldwide scrambling to flatten the curve & contain the spread of the virus.
The new requirements for social distancing in addition to a global shortage of healthcare workers and personal protective equipment (PPE) have presented harsh challenges for medical authorities worldwide, making autonomous digital health solutions now more important than ever before in being able to monitor & treat patients.
Heres some interesting ways digital health & IoT have contributed towards the fight against Covid19...
Artificial Intelligence to Detect the Spread of Epidemics
Covid19 was officially identified & announced on January 9th 2020 by the WHO. Since then, the virus has quickly spread to all corners of the world & changed life as we know it for the foreseeable future.
What you may not know, is that the WHO were actually beaten to the punch by Canadian health monitoring AI platform "Bluedot" which sent word of the outbreak to it's customers on December 31st!
Bluedot uses a series of algorithms to scan world data for signs of potential outbreaks by scouring foreign language news reports, global airline ticketing data & plant & animal disease networks for warning signs that an outbreak may be happening.
Remote Patient Monitoring & Biometric Sensors
In the current healthcare situation, meeting, triaging & diagnosing patients has never been a bigger challenge. Remote patient monitoring devices such as wristbands, bed sensors & biometric clothing give hospitals the ability to track patients vitals such as oxygen density, body temperature & heartrate remotely without having to physically see the patient in person.
An example here is a biometric wristband that detects body temperature, location & movement habits. When you combine this with AI the patient literally has an autonomous doctor monitoring their health for signs of fever or detecting when they fall over & notifying ambulance services of their location.
Another example is a unique smartphone app that can detect body temperature, oxygen density & blood levels simply by the user taking a photograph below their eye using any iphone 8 camera or above. Allowing authorities to triage entire populations for symptoms of illnesses such as Covid19 simply by them downloading an app onto their smartphone.
5G opening new doors for Digital Healthcare
Previously with 3g & 4g (LTE) spectrum, some areas such as Telehealth were unsuitable for cellular connection to the Internet of Things. This is because latency at best even with 4g would be 40ms (milliseconds), proving to be unreliable for complicated AI driven medical equipment or software which needs to analyse & report data without any delay or missed packets.
5G opens new doors for digital healthcare as it offers ultra reliable low latency communication with as many as 1 in a million packets being lost and latency as low as just 1ms. This means even the most complicated real-time healthcare solutions such as those using AI are able to operate seamlessly & reliably without any failures.
Conclusion
At this point, it is clear that autonomous digital health technologies are paving the way for a healthy future.
With developments in the communications industry such as eSIM (eUICC), the communications networks have also evolved to meet the demands of this industry, giving developers real-time un steered management and control of not just their autonomous technology, but also the intelligent connectivity & network infrastructure that enables it to work.
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Have you spotted any interesting telehealth solutions being deployed anywhere around the world? Feel free to tell us about it in the comments below this article!