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Isansys remote patient monitoring technology showcases signi昀椀cant
time savings in pioneering WARD project study
A new clinical study conducted by the WARD Project in Denmark sheds light on the remarkable time-saving potential of
Isansys Lifecare’s remote patient monitoring technology within hospital settings.
Titled ‘Workload associated with manual assessment of vital signs as compared with continuous wireless monitoring,’ the study marks a turning
point in patient care.
Vital sign monitoring is a critical aspect of clinical care in hospitals, and traditionally relies on sporadic manual assessments performed by clinical
staff. However, continuous vital sign monitoring has emerged as a solution to enhance patient outcomes while reducing clinical teams’ workloads.
The WARD project (Wireless Assessment of Respiratory and circulatory Distress) conducted the study to identify the difference in workload
between continuous and manual vital sign monitoring, speci昀椀cally concerning the National Early Warning Score (NEWS).
Isansys, headquartered in Oxford, provided wireless sensors and the patient data acquisition platform that continuously tracked blood pressure,
heart rate, respiratory rate, and peripheral oxygen saturation in 20 patients admitted to a general hospital ward.
Among the key 昀椀ndings of the study, it was discovered that the time required for continuous monitoring was, on average, only six minutes per
patient per day, compared to 14 minutes per patient per day for manual assessments using NEWS.
For isolated patients, continuous monitoring took just 6.6 minutes per patient per day, compared to 22 minutes per patient per day for NEWS.
These results underscore that Isansys’ continuous monitoring technology signi昀椀cantly reduces the time spent on vital sign assessments and that
implementing continuous monitoring holds the potential to ease the burden on clinical staff, allowing them more time to focus on patient care
and other essential tasks.
To put it in perspective, continuous monitoring for 20 patients requires just 113 minutes per day, whereas the traditional NEWS monitoring method
demanded a substantial 480 minutes - equivalent to a full eight-hour shift - from clinical staff.
Dr Heather Duncan, Chief Medical Of昀椀cer at Isansys, said: “This study shows a real bene昀椀t to the way nurses assess patients. Continuous
monitoring saves signi昀椀cant time during each shift by reducing the burden of repeated manual monitoring activities. The continuous monitoring
does not replace the nursing attention, they still need to assess the patient’s general condition, consciousness, and the validity of the vital
signs, but they won’t have to spend time measuring. Nurses can spend more time interacting, assessing & analysing the patients’ condition. The
threshold of bene昀椀t is modest; a NEWS of >/= 3 or if the patient nursed in isolation. So, where acuity is high, and isolation is needed there will
be a tangible difference to the nurses & their patients.”
This study adds to the growing evidence that Isansys’ remote patient monitoring technology has the potential to revolutionise the way healthcare
teams deliver care in hospitals, and to patients in their own homes. By reducing the time spent on vital sign assessments and combining that with
clinically meaningful alerts at centralised monitoring stations and delivered to personal devices, the Isansys platform empowers clinical staff to
provide enhanced care and attention to their patients, and helps reduce overwork, stress, and burnout.
The full 昀椀ndings of the study can be viewed online here.
For more information about Isansys and its Patient Status Engine (PSE) remote patient monitoring technology, please visit: www.isansys.com.
Find out more 02921 680068 • e-mail admin@lawrand.com
Issue 397
October
2023
5