Post on 23-Dec-2015
transcript
Health Watch
Product Identification
Need: Continued
• There is not an adequate system for measuring the day-to-day health of the elderly
• Our Health Watch aims to provide the health monitoring system that is vital to the lives of these elderly
• Moreover it will have the capability of monitoring the health of other individuals
Product Idea
• A health monitoring watch• EKG band worn separately• The watch is the central unit that collects information on the
condition of the user• The information includes:
– Temperature (temperature sensor)– Impact (accelerometer sensor)– Heart condition (portable EKG)– Blood pressure– Location
• Global System for Mobile Communication System through our wireless provider
Product Idea: Continued
• The watch will have the capacity to store health metrics for up to 30 days– The information is stored in flash memory– It continuously records the information and be monitored in
real-time• The health information may optionally be forwarded to
emergency contacts• The information that the watch records is transmitted to a
monitoring division– Thresholds are placed for the individual health information– If the thresholds are surpassed then the paramedics are alerted
Product Idea: Continued
• The information is transferrable across a wireless connection so that the paramedics can have vital information when responding to an emergency
• The information can also be accessed by the user’s physician and/or caregiver
• There are alerts to remind the user when to take their medication
Physical and Financial Viability
• Physical– Sensor• NEED INFORMATION
• Financial– TBD
Market Assessment
Projected Market
• Targeting primarily the Elderly (65+ years old)• Elderly population projected to increase to 54 million
persons by 2020 from a previous total of 31.1 million in 1990
• In 2004, per person health care spending for the 65 and older population was on average $14,797, which is almost 5.6 times higher than is spent per child and 3.3 times as much spent on working-age persons
Sources:http://www.census.gov/apsd/wepeople/we-9.pdf
https://www.cms.gov/NationalHealthExpendData/downloads/2004-highlights.pdf
Market Assessment
• The number of elderly is current increasing as a result of the members of the Baby Boomer generation which are just now in 2011 reaching the age of 65
• The growth rate of the elderly is set to be double the growth rate of the overall population during the period from 1990 to 2020 and in 2020 it is expected that 1 in 6 Americans would be elderly
• Due to increasing life spans and population growth, a constant replenishing market of elderly persons is being created each year
Sources:http://www.census.gov/apsd/wepeople/we-9.pdf
Challenges
• Introducing a new product to the market• Formulating a timely partnership with a
distinguished wireless company• Existence of Technologies – So that adequate coverage is provided to the user
Uncertainty
• The main uncertainty involved in developing this product is whether or not the consumer would be willing to actually wear the band in conjunction with the wristwatch to provide them the best results
• There is also some uncertainty involved in whether or not the technologies incorporated into the wristwatch can be minimized to such a level that the size of the device matches what is considered appropriate for a watch by the consumer
Timing
• Necessary to move quickly to capture the first mover advantage in a highly lucrative environment
• Due to the emergence of many similar technologies that do not incorporate all of the features in our device, it is expected that in the very near future a competitor will emerge in our same area of focus
Customers• The consumers may not be the users of the device• Statistics
• 8.8 million elderly live alone• 16 million only live with their spouse• Stats on elderly in nursing home
• Family members of these elderly persons wishing to ensure the well being of their loved ones
• Target customers are concerned individuals looking to monitor their health as well as that of their elderly family members– A large portion of the customers for this product will likely be these
family members giving the device as a gift to their parents or other loved ones they are concerned about
Sources:http://www.census.gov/apsd/wepeople/we-9.pdf
What Customers Want
• Two segments of customers that each have different wants/needs from the product
• First is that of loved ones buying the product for their elderly relatives– Focused primarily on complete health coverage with the most
accurate readings and the best ability to assist in an emergency situation
• Second is the elderly themselves using the product– Focused on ease of use and comfort while wearing the chest band and
the watch– It must be easy and straightforward to monitor their health
information and also have emergency help arrive once a situation does occur even if they are incapacitated
Governmental Regulations• Code of Federal Regulations Title 21: Food and Drugs
– Outlines various classes of devices which are subject to monitoring and approval– Details which class of products must participate in pre-market approval and post-
market surveillance• Goal is to create a device that is categorized as a “Class I” device
– This means that the device is subject to only general restrictions such as misbranding.– A device is in Class I if general controls are sufficient to provide reasonable assurance of
the safety and effectiveness of the device– Also, a device is Class I if it is not life-supporting, life-sustaining, or not of substantial
importance in preventing impairment of human health and which does not present a potential unreasonable risk of illness or injury
• Since our product is simply monitoring vitals and not promising to sustain the user’s health, our goal is to have it classified as a Class I device and therefore subject to the least stringent amount of regulation by the government
Source:www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cdrh/cfdocs/cfcfr/cfrsearch.cfm
Physical/Technical Limitations• The physical limitations of the device are that the chest strap must
be adjustable to fit around any elderly person’s torso and still maintain accurate readings
• The wristwatch must also be adjustable to fit any sized wrist while still being able to provide verifiable readings with the variety of sensors used
• Technical limitations are primarily regarding the overall size of the device– All components must fit in the size of a watch or slightly larger so as to not
interfere with the user’s day to day life– Some standard limitations include powering the device, resulting in the
need for either a charger or battery system and also the technical challenges of incorporating all sensors together in one single compact device while having all components work properly
Major Risks• Inaccurate measurements from sensors
– Can result from the watch/strap not being placed correctly on the user, therefore a health problem might not be accounted for if safeguards are not put in place• Remedy this with notifications to the user that the sensors are not attached
properly
– False-positives resulting again from inaccurate readings• Product must be able to label false-positives and discard them as such to prevent
improper emergency alerts
• Inability to shrink components into a suitable size for the user– Can result from the technology not scaling down enough when
incorporating all components together– Alternative would be to provide the user with a choice of a few limited
components they would like included in the product or the option for larger, bulkier product that provides all of the functionality
Competition and their Strategies
• LifeAlert – Unless we decide to sell to them– LifeAlert offers in home protection to users who
are conscious but immobile in their home and need service
• Other emerging medical device companies looking to enter this market
Our Strategy
• Broad Spectrum of Service– We intend to offer a range of detectable
emergency situations, even when the user is unconscious
Requirements of Project
• Rapid Compilation• Effective wireless Partnership • Comfort of wear • Utilization of technology • Collaboration
Design Concept and Technical Requirements
Wrist watch componentGrace Fang
Required Functionality • Being able to sense abnormalities in:
– Blood Pressure (refer to chart for normal ranges)
– Pulse (heart rate) (60 – 100)
– Body Temperature (ideal range: Oral: 36.8 °C (98.2 °F), Under arm: 36.4 °C (97.6 °F))
– Movement (detect falls, when the watch is not worn, etc.)• Time• Glucose monitoring (optional)• Storage capability• Receiving signal from the chest strap• Sending both records and emergency signals to the host company
database• Large interface for ease of use• Voice activation (for the hearing impaired)• Microphone• Manual push button in case of emergency
Technical Requirements
• Ideal weight range: ~6 oz.• Ideal power usage: ~5 Watts• Ideally charged by a lithium battery• Ideal thickness: <20mm• Ideal dimensions of interface: TBA• Waterproof (stainless steel material)
Current model systems
• Blood pressure and heart rateNovel Wristwatch:
http://www.healthstats.com.sg/images/publications/Pub_01.pdf
• Body Temperature and movementHitachi
http://www.ageinplacetech.com/pressrelease/aframe-digital-health-monitoring-technology-seniors
• Timehttp://electronics.howstuffworks.com/gadgets/clocks-
watches/digital-clock7.htm
References to look up
• http://www.springerlink.com/content/w2267j2v654827t7/
Design Concept & Technical Requirements
Chest ComponentDanial Sajed
Required Functionality
• Determines heart rate continuously• Records EKG statistics• Determines if user suffers a severe impact e.g. falls, vehicle
collisions• Communicates information to wrist component• Central processing unit interprets data and determines if
there is need for medical assistance
Technical Requirements
• Ideal weight range 250-500g– About the weight of a men’s shirt
• Ideal power usage 4-6W– The same usage as an iPhone 4G– With an equivalent battery, should only require charging at night
• No more than 2cm thick– Will be nearly invisible underneath a sweater or a loose shirt
• Under $100 to make
Exterior Design
Primary Electronic Components in Plastic Casing
AdjustableElastic Band
Optional Shoulder Supports
Necessary Components
• EKG Sensors
• Accelerometer
• CPU, Communications
iPhone CPU, Components
Power, Weight Breakdown
• Power 4-6W– EKG - approx. 50mW– Accelerometer < 25mW– Processing (at 1GHz) - approx. 4W
• Weight 250-500g– EKG - approx. 17g– Accelerometer < 1g– Processor and wireless transmitter < 50g– Plastic casing, straps < 100g– Battery < 100g
Cost Breakdown
• EKG sensors and module – This is easily the most expensive component and based on current retail costs can run up to $75 to produce. If mass produced, costs should be able to be reduced. There also may be redundancies between the module and the main CPU, so that cost can likely be driven down.
• Accelerometer, wireless technology, processor – The costs of these components have all been driven down due to mass manufacturing in smart phones. On one chip, these will probably cost only $30 to mass produce.
• Straps and casing < $2
Risks
• Cost– The biggest risk to this project is the cost of the components
• The EKG equipment is extremely expensive• Further research may be required to eliminate cost by reducing redundancy with
central processor
– Processor• Ideally, we will be able to use components like wireless technology, accelerometers,
flash memory and CPU that have been driven down in cost by the production of smart phones
• Power– Integration of components may require more power than anticipated
• Battery may end up being bulky, heavy or expensive
Sources
• EKG– Research paper on low-cost, low-weight EKG sensors and tech
• http://www.eecs.umich.edu/~prabal/teaching/eecs598-w10/readings/PCB+06.pdf
– Sales (pricing info)• http://bio-medical.com/products/thought-technology-ecgekg-sensorwith-wrist-stra
ps.html
• Processor, Communication, Accelerometer– iPhone information
• http://www.radphone.info/apple-iphone-3g3gsipad-parts-datasheets-componentschematicsdiagram-and-info/
Receiver-Concept and Definition
Interfaces between worn watch and telephone line (landline)
• Hooks into an existing telephone line• maintains link between system and watch• link contains voice and data upon request– data is requested via operator control
• cheap technology
Receiver-Subsystems
• telephone hook in• interface board– communications with watch and phone
• small box, can be plugged into the wall
Receiver-AlternativeCell Phone Hook in
Advantages• service everywhere• EMS knows your location• no additional devices
needed• can be an app
Disadvantages• cell phones are not in every
home• would need deal with
provider• cell phone can already serve
as an emergency device
Receiver- Contains speaker
Advantages• only need to get data when
send a message and to initiate call
Disadvantages• speaker needs to be loud
enough to be heard and integrate a microphone to receive
• Depending on placement, wont be useful in all places in home
Receiver-Requirements
• -Communicate wirelessly with watch• -can receive a signal from watch• -can receive data from the watch upon
request• -autodialing through phone line• -plugs into wall
Receiver-Risks and Money
• risk inherent in the design– make all the devices communicate– train operators to understand how they work
• Financial issues– receiver would be smaller than an answering machine– technology already exists
• Reasons for Subsystem– this allows for interface with call center– makes watch more than just a fancy watch– required for product effectiveness
Call Center-Concept
• Call center to interface between the Watch user and EMS
• Determine if the emergency is real or if its a false alarm
• comfort the user if its an emergency while informing authorities
• access to telephone and basic medical records• training to understand what they are needed to do• Uses existing call center systems that require minimal
retraining
Call Center-Design AlternativeComputer Voice system
Advantages• Save money by removing
the human operators in the call center
• Rapid EMS response
Disadvantages• Can’t separate out false
alarms• Larger volume of false
alarms • EMS could get annoyed at
having a computer voice that cant respond back