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Abu Dhabi uses wearable tech to support high-risk covid-19 patients

Abu Dhabi uses wearable tech to support high-risk covid-19 patients

High-risk Covid-19 patients in Abu Dhabi are being given round-the-clock care at their homes using a hi-tech device that tracks their oxygen saturation, temperature, and heart rate.

The gadget, which is strapped to the wrist and can be removed, unlike tracking watches, automatically checks the patient’s vital signs, which also includes the respiratory rate, every hour.

Healthcare staff monitors the data on a dashboard that charts the readings.

They then call the patient if they spot any abnormalities, which could include a drop in oxygen, a rise in temperature, or a quicker pulse.

If the change is concerning, the patient is advised to call an ambulance for assessment.

The device, which connects to the person’s phone via Bluetooth, was successfully trialed over the past three weeks by Abu Dhabi Health Services Company (Seha).

It will now be rolled out across all assessment centers in the emirate for use among high-risk patients who are eligible for the home isolation program.

They include people over the age of 60, as well as people suffering from conditions such as high blood pressure, diabetes, or lung conditions such as asthma, which are under control but make them vulnerable to developing complications from the coronavirus.

Dr. Marwan Al Kaabi, acting group chief operations at Seha, said the device offers huge advantages, which include being able to detect the first signs of deterioration in the patient.

“We can intervene timely,” he said.

The use of the technology led to one Covid-19 patient being admitted to the ICU this week after the data showed he had begun to struggle.

Donnah Saying, a nurse with Abu Dhabi Telemedicine Centre, which manages the platform, said the condition of the patient, who is in his 70s, deteriorated quickly.

“At first he was OK, then later on the nurse noticed that the saturation was getting lower, to below 90 percent,” she said.

“Sometimes that happens with the activities they are doing. But this time he was just resting.

“The nurse called him but he was then complaining of chest pain. So what happened was, it was very quick, in 20 to 30 minutes.

“The family was advised to call the ambulance. The paramedics tried stabilizing him, but he was brought to the hospital and admitted to the ICU.”

His condition has since improved after receiving treatment in hospital, said Yousif Alhammadi, a senior SOS officer with Seha.

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“Thankfully he is stable now,” he said.

Dr. Al Kaabi said patients are sometimes reluctant to be discharged or to isolate at home because they feel anxious.

“Many of our patients, instead of being kept in the hospital for monitoring, we can do that from them in their own homes, and we can still get the same information,” he said.

“Having such a device gives them the reassurance they need to go home knowing someone is monitoring them and someone can intervene if they need that.”

Dr. Al Kaabi said he expects the device to have uses outside Covid-19, such as booking and checking in patients for appointments electronically, as well as checking their vital signs.

“For now it is available in all our Covid assessment centers.

“And we think by next year, this technology will have wider uses outside Covid-19.”

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Technology Express staff and is published from a syndicated feed)

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