Patient SafetyNet Home Overview & Clinical Benefits Enabling Technology Halo Index Resources

Overview and Clinical Benefits

Clinical Flexibility

Configurable screens allow you to view the number of patients, clinical measurements, and level of detail that are important to you

With Patient SafetyNet, you choose the system configurations that meet your specific clinical need. You can display real-time data from up to 40 patients at a time and select up to four parameters based on your patient population and clinical practices.

individual patients

Parameter View: View up to four parameter value s and alarm status of all patients at a glance

Trend View: Review up to 96 hours of history from all monitored parameters with an easy-to-use touchscreen

Trend View: Review up to 96 hours of history from all monitored parameters with an easy-to-use touchscreen


Powerful Information

Powerful Information to Manage Patients, Optimize Workflow, and Assess IT Infrastructure

Flexible and convenient access with the ability to generate and print reports from any hospital computer, eliminating the need to download data directly from the bedside device.

> Patient Report – Improve clinical workflow by optimizing alarms and notification settings
> System Report – Summarizes system level events
> Patient Trend Analysis Report – Evaluate historical trend data to determine additional diagnostic needs (example below)

Data like respiration rate and oximetry can prove to be valuable tools in understanding whether a patient’s respiration patterns indicate previously undetected issues, especially during sleep.

patient screen shot

Web Interface: Web-based configurable reporting to display the data you need, when you need it


"One unanticipated effect is new diagnoses identified by the system. Many obstructive respiration patterns, likely undiagnosed sleep apnea, have caused repeated alarms at night and led to increased collaboration with the on-site sleep lab."1

Joshua Pyke
Patient Safety & Quality Healthcare

patient trend

References

  1. Pyke, Joshua B, et al. Patient Safety & Quality Healthcare. 2010.