Brought to you as a public service of the Open Spectrum Foundation (Stichting Open Spectrum), Amsterdam - Prague

openspectrum.info logo

NEWS

Bluetooth profile for medical devices due in 2007

From "New Medical Device Profile to Speed Bluetooth Wireless Technology Growth in Medical, Health and Fitness Industries," Slashphone, 23 May:

"Hundreds of millions of people worldwide who suffer with chronic illnesses, from diabetes to high blood pressure and heart disease, could benefit from a Bluetooth SIG effort aimed at allowing health-related devices to work with consumer electronics products.

"The Bluetooth SIG today announced the formation of a Medical Devices Working Group. This team, made up of 19 member companies including IBM, Intel, Motorola, Nonin Medical, Philips Electronics and Welch Allyn, will work together to create and ratify a Bluetooth Medical Device Profile that will expand the use of Bluetooth technology into the medical, health and fitness markets.

"The new profile will ensure a comprehensive, yet easy, user experience and optimized interoperability between health-related devices and personal consumer electronics products such as mobile phones, PCs and PDAs where Bluetooth technology is already common.

" 'Health-related devices in the home, such as weight scales, blood pressure monitors and exercise equipment, which implement the new standard will be able to send information wirelessly to Bluetooth enabled PCs or cell phones so that users can monitor their health information or share this information with a doctor or fitness coach anywhere in the world,' said Robert Hughes, chair of the new Bluetooth SIG Medical Devices Working Group and a senior wireless standards architect in Intel's Digital Health Group.

" 'The Working Group believes it can make a difference in the lives of people, especially those with chronic conditions or those striving to improve their fitness, by creating a Bluetooth profile that enables medical, health, and fitness devices to better connect patient with provider. In addition to helping people lead healthier lives, it represents a powerful business opportunity for companies creating Bluetooth enabled devices in a large and growing market segment.'

"The Working Group will begin work immediately, drafting the specification this year with the new profile available for use in devices in the first half of 2007. The completed profile will run on all current versions of Bluetooth technology including the future high-speed version. Although Bluetooth enabled medical devices currently exist, the method of Bluetooth communications used is proprietary and therefore not usually interoperable with devices from other manufacturers.

"The medical, health and fitness use cases the working group plans to support with the Medical Device Profile fall into the following primary categories:

  • Health and Wellness Management - By using a Bluetooth enabled device such as a blood pressure cuff, weight scale or cholesterol monitor, the user regularly collects health data that is then wirelessly transmitted to another Bluetooth device such as a mobile phone, PDA or health appliance and could then be sent to the patient's caregiver for remote monitoring and health management of the patient.
  • Chronic Disease Management or Patient Recovery - Using a Bluetooth sensor, a chronically ill patient can measure their vital health indicators on their own or with their caregiver via a Bluetooth computation engine (PDA, PC, mobile phone, etc.).
  • Medication Management - A patient can receive reminders to take medication using a Bluetooth medication dispenser. If the patient has not taken medication after several reminders, an alert with the time and the medicine missed can be sent to their caregiver who can take the appropriate action.
  • Fitness and Workout Tracking - The user is able to monitor fitness goals by tracking health data during a workout with a Bluetooth sensor such as a calorie counter, weight scale, or heart rate monitor. Data is then wirelessly transmitted to a Bluetooth computation engine (PDA, PC, mobile phone, etc.) where the user can track his or her progress relative to their fitness goals.
  • Remote Biosensor Measurement - With a Bluetooth medical kit connected to a set-top box or PC, patients can have their health status checked from the comfort of their own home by conducting a phone or video visit with their caregiver. Once the information is gathered it is then transmitted to the caregiver in order for the patient's health to be monitored.
"Additional use cases may include remote monitoring of multiple patients, seamless device replacement and support for clinical trials.

"And as with any medical and health application, the Medical Device Profile will be compliant with the [US] Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and other international data privacy requirements."

[: 24 May 2006]

Click here for the LATEST HEADLINES

Recent News...

802.11n standard to split into fixed, mobile versions? (22 May)

WiFi partly de-licensed in Kyrgyzstan (22 May)

License exempt RF enables localised services: new book, online forum, conference (21 May)

"Affluent early adopters" prefer home WiFi - survey (11 May)

The developing 802.11s wireless mesh standard (11 May)

"AT&T and MobiTV to provide live TV via WiFi hot spots" (10 May)

Report on Software-Defined Radio for Public Safety (8 May)

UWB radar detects buried victims' breathing (8 May)

"RF switch" integrates wireless technologies (8 May)

Wireless sensors monitor and "learn" patterns of behavior for senior home care (8 May)

"The RFID Hacking Underground" (6 May)

Questionaire and Workshop Presentations on Wireless Commons (4 May)

Gigabit UWB for whole-house multimedia (2 May)

"RFID tags used to teach English" (2 May)

RFID Privacy Best Practices Guide (2 May)

"RFID 'Til the Cows Come Home" (25 April)

Developing smart, flexible radios: unsolved problems come into focus (25 April)

Rain/freeze sensor controls irrigation wirelessly (25 April)

"Vision Goes Wireless" (21 April)

Workshop on the collective use of spectrum (Brussels, 27 April) (21 April)

Industrial "Wireless Users Summit" (21 April)

The Forecast Umbrella (17 April)

Austrian highways to get wireless Internet (17 April)

Smart Radio Challenge (14 April)

"World's First RFID-Enabled Arcade Games" (13 April)

RFID tags susceptible to DoS attacks, data-rewrites (12 April)

3 European consultations on license exempt radio (10 April)

"A Single Chipset for Global UWB" (7 April)

Wireless sensor nets make infrastructure smarter (7 April)

Spread Spectrum: Hedy Lamarr and the Mobile Phone (7 April)

RFID-enabled bins track trash by household (6 April)

More pressure for license exempt use of empty TV channels (6 April)

"Cellular WiFi" for mobile/municipal coverage (5 April)

Is wireless creating "an environment of tyranny?" (5 April)

Visit our News Archive for additional stories.

To receive the openspectrum.info newsfeed by email, enter your email address:

(Email subscriptions managed by FeedBurner)