Monday, 17 November 2014

What are your vital signs


Vital signs are used to measure the body’s basic functions.[1][2] These measurements are taken to help assess the general physical health of a person, give clues to possible diseases, and show progress toward recovery. The normal ranges for a person’s vital signs vary with age, weight, gender, and overall health.[3]
There are four primary vital signs: body temperatureblood pressurepulse (heart rate), and breathing rate (respiratory rate). However, depending on the clinical setting these may include other measurements called the "fifth vital sign" or "sixth vital sign". Vital signs are recorded using the LOINC international standard coding system.[4][5]
Early warning scores have been proposed that combine the individual values of vital signs into a single score. This was done in recognition that deteriorating vital signs often precede cardiac arrest and/or admission to the intensive care unit. Used appropriately, a rapid response team can assess and treat a deteriorating patient and prevent adverse outcomes.[6][7][8]

Primary vital signs[edit]

There are four primary vital signs which are standard in most medical settings:
  1. Heart Rate or Pulse
  2. Blood pressure
  3. Respiratory rate
  4. Body temperature
The equipment needed is a thermometer, a sphygmomanometer, and a watch. Though a pulse can be taken by hand, a stethoscope may be required for a patient with a very weak pulse.

Temperature[edit]

Temperature recording gives an indication of core body temperature which is normally tightly controlled (thermoregulation) as it affects the rate of chemical reactions.
Temperature can be recorded in order to establish a baseline for the individual's normal body temperature for the site and measuring conditions. The main reason for checking body temperature is to solicit any signs of systemic infection or inflammation in the presence of a fever (temp > 38.5 °C/101.3 °F or sustained temp > 38 °C/100.4 °F), or elevated significantly above the individual's normal temperature. Other causes of elevated temperature include hyperthermia.
Temperature depression (hypothermia) also needs to be evaluated. It is also noteworthy to review the trend of the patient's temperature. A patient with a fever of 38 °C does not necessarily indicate an ominous sign if his previous temperature has been higher. Body temperature is maintained through a balance of the heat produced by the body and the heat lost from the body.
Temperature is commonly considered to be a vital sign most notably in a hospital setting. EMTs (Emergency Medical Technicians), in particular, are taught to measure the vital signs of: respiration, pulse, skin, pupils, and blood pressure as "the 5 vital signs" in a non-hospital setting.[9]

Blood pressure[edit]

The blood pressure is recorded as two readings; a high systolic pressure, which occurs during the maximal contraction of the heart, and the lower diastolic or resting pressure. A normal blood pressure would be 120 being the systolic over 80, the diastolic. Usually the blood pressure is read from the left arm unless there is some damage to the arm. The difference between the systolic and diastolic pressure is called the pulse pressure. The measurement of these pressures is now usually done with an aneroid or electronic sphygmomanometer. The classic measurement device is a mercurysphygmomanometer, using a column of mercury measured off in millimeters. In the United States and UK, the common form is millimeters of mercury, whilst elsewhere SI units of pressure are used. There is no natural 'normal' value for blood pressure, but rather a range of values that on increasing are associated with increased risks. The guideline acceptable reading also takes into account other co-factors for disease. Therefore, elevated blood pressure (hypertension) is variously defined when the systolic number is persistently over 140–160 mmHg. Low blood pressure is hypotension. Blood pressures are also taken at other portions of the extremities. These pressures are called segmental blood pressures and are used to evaluate blockage or arterial occlusion in a limb (see Ankle brachial pressure index).

Pulse[edit]

Main article: Pulse
The pulse is the physical expansion of the artery. Its rate is usually measured either at the wrist or the ankle and is recorded as beats per minute. The pulse commonly taken is from the radial artery at the wrist. Sometimes the pulse cannot be taken at the wrist and is taken at the elbow (brachial artery), at the neck against the carotid artery (carotid pulse), behind the knee (popliteal artery), or in the foot dorsalis pedis or posterior tibial arteries. The pulse rate can also be measured by listening directly to the heartbeat using a stethoscope. The pulse varies with age. A newborn or infant can have a heart rate of about 130–150 beats per minute. A toddler's heart will beat about 100–120 times per minute, an older child's heartbeat is around 60–100 beats per minute, adolescents around 80–100 beats per minute, and adults' pulse rate is anywhere between 50 and 80 beats per minute.

Respiratory rate[edit]

Main article: Respiratory rate
Varies with age, but the normal reference range for an adult is 16–20 breaths/minute (RCP 2012). The value of respiratory rate as an indicator of potential respiratory dysfunction has been investigated but findings suggest it is of limited value. Respiratory rate is clear indicator of acidotic states, as the main function of respiration is removal of CO2 leaving bicarbonate base in circulation.

Additional signs[edit]

The U.S., in addition to the above four, it is required to record the patients HeightWeight, and Body Mass Index.[10]

Fifth vital signs[edit]

The "fifth vital sign" may refer to a few different parameters.
  • Pain is considered a standard fifth vital sign in some organizations such as the U.S. Veterans Affairs.[11] Pain is measured on a pain scale based on subjective patient reporting and may be unreliable.[12] Some studies show that recording pain routinely may not change management.[13][14][15] Other "fifth vital signs" include:

Sixth vital signs[edit]

There is no standard "sixth vital sign"; its use is more informal and discipline-dependent than the above.

Keeping your Healthcare Data Safe in the Cloud


NOVEMBER 15, 2013



Image from http://newsroom.cisco.com
Image from http://newsroom.cisco.com
While more and more companies are adopting cloud computing for its convenience and flexibility, the healthcare industry has been little slow in adopting this new trend. But gradually many hospitals and clinics are recognizing the benefits of cloud computing and embracing this technology to revolutionize their procedures. In the modern world of healthcare, it can be extremely challenging for the physicians to keep track of significant amount of information, from patient records to insurance information. With the traditional system, it can be burdensome to transfer physical files from one facility to another, wasting time and spending money on transportation and employee expenses. The cloud storage systems allow organizations to place data on a centralized electronic system that can be accessed anytime from anywhere. The healthcare industry has to deal with the massive amount of data, and cloud services help them to access and manage health records effectively in order to provide better patient care.
Research done by Healthcare IT news (http://www.healthcareitnews.com)
Research done by Healthcare IT news (http://www.healthcareitnews.com)
The cloud storage services provide lots of benefits to the healthcare industry. The healthcare data is doubling every year, what that means is the industry has to invest in hardware equipments, tweak databases and servers for storing large amount of data. With a properly implemented cloud storage system, hospitals can establish a network that can process tasks quickly without a drop in performance. Doctors no longer need to be tied to their offices to look up patient information. They can pull up medical records remotely to review patient records and tests. Cloud computing has proven cost effective for patients and healthcare providers, as the patients do not have to pay twice for the same test when they go to different doctors and medical offices do not have to pay for on-site hardware and storage services to maintain medical records. Lastly, the cloud services requires less technical support or maintenance compared to the traditional data storage systems.
However with all these benefits there are certain risks with using cloud services as well. As we all know disasters and security breaches can be damaging to every organization.But with health care it can be even more damaging because healthcare cloud security not only have to ensure that the sensitive patient information are protected but also to ensure the availability of critical medical data that can be the difference between life or death. Two security breaches at Oregon Health and Science University were reported recently.” In the two OHSU incidents, information on a total of more than 3,000 patients was inappropriately posted in unencrypted spreadsheets using cloud-based e-mail and document storage services from Google.” These data breaches expose a lot of personal information of the patients apart from medical records such as name, address and social security numbers.
Image from http://delimiter.com.au
Image from http://delimiter.com.au
The healthcare companies can take following steps to ensure that patient records are secure in the cloud:
  • Assess your risks: Risk assessments are mandatory for the protection of electronic health records. Conduct tests and evaluations to determine possible threats to your information systems and how will it impact your cloud environment.  “Be thorough in your assessment, and analyze all security policies and architectural vulnerabilities relating to storage and backup, encryption use and data authentication and transmission”.By assessing the risks and their impact you can take corrective actions to protect your information systems.
  • Train employees to use strong passwords: Make sure that your staff uses strong and hard to guess passwords. The passwords should be at least 8 digits long and a combination of letters, numbers and special characters. Also implement a procedure where your staff needs to change passwords periodically. 
  • Logout:  Almost all cloud services log you out after a period of inactivity. Still then make sure you log out of the application once you are done. That will make sure nobody can your information when you are not around.
  • Active monitoring: Constantly monitor and scan your systems to detect any suspicious activities. Set up alerts for anomalies like brute force attempts, abnormal web application requests or suspicious increases in traffic. In case of any security breach, research and determine the data patterns of the attack and take countermeasures for better security.
Keep your health records secure with SpiderOak
SpiderOak is a secure cloud storage service that protects its user data from government surveillance. This service provides users with fully private cloud storage and syncing, featuring all of the benefits of the cloud along with 100% data privacy. SpiderOak is available with onsite deployment and private servers or outsourced deployment through a private and secured public cloud server, so that users and small businesses of all sorts and sizes can tailor the service to fit their needs.
SpiderOak protects sensitive user data with 256-bit AES encryption so that files and passwords stay private. Authorized accounts and network devices can store and sync sensitive data with complete privacy, because this cloud service has absolutely “zero-knowledge” of user passwords or data. And all plaintext encryption keys are exclusively stored on approved devices because SpiderOak never hosts any plaintext data. This way, even if programs like NSA’s PRISM continue to stand unchallenged, people can rest easy knowing that their data is truly protected. SpiderOak’s cross-platform private cloud services are available for users on Windows, Mac, and Linux platforms, along with Android and iOS mobile devices, allowing for full flexibility and mobile access. SpiderOak offers amazing products like SpiderOak Hive and SpiderOak Blue to secure consumer and enterprise data. You can signup for this product now.

The Revolution Hidden In The Apple Health Kit



 Apple is about to change the relationship between brands, data and customers. That’s the secret sauce in its new Health Kit offering, according to several observers of data and security.
Greg Lloyd over at Traction Software, the collaborative work platform, puts it like this:
“Google, Yahoo and others gather correlate, analyze and use personal identity metadata including your location, search history, browsing history to monetarize for their own purposes or to sell to others. I believe Apple is trying to build a counter story on security using identity and services encapsulated in devices you own.”
When you do business with Google, as a consumer, you strike a deal. In return for free search you get ads and for those ads you agree to your data being collected, stored and sold on. The way Apple sees business up ahead, when you use an Apple health service, Apple manages data for you, on your terms. That is a revolution.
Greg’s note of caution though is well advised because none of us know quite how Apple will implement its new “kits”. In health in particular the ultimate solution will be determined by standards that Apple may help to define. It’s also a long road – health is a conservative sector.
In order to find out more though, and picking up on Greg’s intimation of identity as the core of the solution, I spoke via email with David Waite and Paul Madsen at Ping Identity, specialists in identity management,and Farid Fadaie, senior director of product at Bit Torrent, for an alternative view of security and identity in health.
These experts have a particular interest in the use of identity and distributed systems as security mechanisms.
The first point to emerge from that discussion is that Apple has entered the health arena as an enabler. There’s surely a lesson there for every other business contemplating or executing a platform strategy.
Whatever Apple does down the line, first base is to enable local storage on the iPhone of data collected by other devices,  says Waite
Short term it is entirely on the phone. They do not even support Health Kit on iPad (from what I understand) to have it work between my devices.
One of the first suppliers to throw their hat in the ring is WebMD, which is already busy on an app to interpret sensor data.
HealthStation installation v1
HealthStation installation v1 (Photo credit: juhansonin)
Madsen also sees Apple adopting an enabling role:
Apple is positioning its Health app as the point of aggregation for all the user’s different health data, and Health Kit the development platform to enable that integration.  But critically, indications are that the health data will for the most part be collected by sensors (Nike+, Withings Scale, Fitbit Flex etc) of other wearable manufacturers…. offering – i..e stay away from the hardware for now and instead provide the services & software glue to tie all the existing hardware into some sort of cohesive whole.
One reason for that might be security. The iPhone (at least the later versions) have fingerprint sensor security. If health data passes between an iPhone and an iPad how can the device(s) be sure of the user’s identity? On a single device, especially the iPhone that has fingerprint access, identity is solvable on the device.
With multiple devices it becomes more difficult and more prone to the complexity of multiple users.
They seem to want one device to represent a single persona, says Waite, – not a bad position for a hardware vendor to take. They encapsulate your online identity for services like Twitter and Facebook onto your device, but this is primarily so that applications do not do this work themselves.
That also means Apple is looking to deepen the service value of the smartphone, something Samsung has been trying to do. Samsung, however, has also added more devices (the Gear and Gear Fit in particular). Apple seems to be rallying the market back towards the iPhone.
It means Apple must see the iPhone as a key profit center for years to come.
It does also mean though that Apple must now innovate rapidly in services. As Health Kit builds momentum, Apple will be in need of a new identity solution Madsen says. Its attempt, in the near future, to parlay data between institutions and devices.