Power Supply Issues in E-health Monitoring Applications

Authors

  • Alan Davidson Author
  • Neha Mathur Author
  • Ivan Glesk Author
  • Arjan Buis Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24084/repqj13.478

Keywords:

e-health, health monitoring, power cycling

Abstract

Abstract. Recent years have seen a rapid growth in the development of e-health systems for the continuous remote patient monitoring of physiological data such as temperature, heart rate (HR), Blood pressure (BP), oxygenation (SpO2), respiration and glucose levels. The roll-out of such schemes show promise in delivering improvements in patient care while at the same time reducing both the demand for resources and the financial burden on healthcare systems. These wearable monitoring systems are used to monitor, log and transmit patient data to a central health authority. Depending on the patient, it is often critical that the monitoring system reliability is high to deliver the appropriate patient care and ensure patient safety. However, since wearable systems are solely dependent on battery power, continuous monitoring will rapidly deplete the battery energy making the system prone to failure. In this paper, methods to reduce power consumption will be discussed using the example of prosthetic socket temperature monitoring data

Author Biographies

  • Alan Davidson

    Dept. of Electronic and Electrical Engineering

    Faculty of Engineering

    University of Strathclyde

    204 George Street, Glasgow, G1 1XW, United Kingdom,

    Phone number: +44 41 548 4978, e-mail: Alan.Davidson@strath.ac.uk

  • Neha Mathur

    Dept. of Electronic and Electrical Engineering

    Faculty of Engineering

    University of Strathclyde

    204 George Street, Glasgow, G1 1XW, United Kingdom,

    Phone number: +44 41 548 4978, e-mail: Ivan.Glesk@strath.ac.uk,

  • Ivan Glesk

    Dept. of Electronic and Electrical Engineering

    Faculty of Engineering

    University of Strathclyde

    204 George Street, Glasgow, G1 1XW, United Kingdom,

    Phone number: +44 41 548 4978, e-mail: Ivan.Glesk@strath.ac.uk,

  • Arjan Buis

    Dept. of Biomedical Engineering

    Faculty of Engineering

    University of Strathclyde

    106 Rottenrow, Glasgow, G1 1XW, United Kingdom

    Phone number: +44 41 548 4978, e-mail: Arjan.Buis@strath.ac.uk

Published

2024-01-16

Issue

Section

Articles