TY - JOUR
T1 - Implementation of a WAP-based telemedicine system for patient monitoring
AU - Hung, Kevin
AU - Zhang, Yuan Ting
N1 - Funding Information:
Manuscript received January 16, 2002; revised July 15, 2002. This work was supported by the Innovative Technology Commission (ITS/114/01), Hong Kong, and cosponsored by Standard Telecommunications Ltd. (STL) and Integrated Display Technology (IDT).
PY - 2003/6
Y1 - 2003/6
N2 - Many parties have already demonstrated telemedicine applications that use cellular phones and the Internet. A current trend in telecommunication is the convergence of wireless communication and computer network technologies, and the emergence of wireless application protocol (WAP) devices is an example. Since WAP will also be a common feature found in future mobile communication devices, it is worthwhile to investigate its use in telemedicine. This paper describes the implementation and experiences with a WAP-based telemedicine system for patient-monitoring that has been developed in our laboratory. It utilizes WAP devices as mobile access terminals for general inquiry and patient-monitoring services. Authorized users can browse the patients' general data, monitored blood pressure (BP), and electrocardiogram (ECG) on WAP devices in store-and-forward mode. The applications, written in wireless markup language (WML), WMLScript, and Perl, resided in a content server. A MySQL relational database system was set up to store the BP readings, ECG data, patient records, clinic and hospital information, and doctors' appointments with patients. A wireless ECG subsystem was built for recording ambulatory ECG in an indoor environment and for storing ECG data into the database. For testing, a WAP phone compliant with WAP 1.1 was used at GSM 1800 MHz by circuit-switched data (CSD) to connect to the content server through a WAP gateway, which was provided by a mobile phone service provider in Hong Kong. Data were successfully retrieved from the database and displayed on the WAP phone. The system shows how WAP can be feasible in remote patient-monitoring and patient data retrieval.
AB - Many parties have already demonstrated telemedicine applications that use cellular phones and the Internet. A current trend in telecommunication is the convergence of wireless communication and computer network technologies, and the emergence of wireless application protocol (WAP) devices is an example. Since WAP will also be a common feature found in future mobile communication devices, it is worthwhile to investigate its use in telemedicine. This paper describes the implementation and experiences with a WAP-based telemedicine system for patient-monitoring that has been developed in our laboratory. It utilizes WAP devices as mobile access terminals for general inquiry and patient-monitoring services. Authorized users can browse the patients' general data, monitored blood pressure (BP), and electrocardiogram (ECG) on WAP devices in store-and-forward mode. The applications, written in wireless markup language (WML), WMLScript, and Perl, resided in a content server. A MySQL relational database system was set up to store the BP readings, ECG data, patient records, clinic and hospital information, and doctors' appointments with patients. A wireless ECG subsystem was built for recording ambulatory ECG in an indoor environment and for storing ECG data into the database. For testing, a WAP phone compliant with WAP 1.1 was used at GSM 1800 MHz by circuit-switched data (CSD) to connect to the content server through a WAP gateway, which was provided by a mobile phone service provider in Hong Kong. Data were successfully retrieved from the database and displayed on the WAP phone. The system shows how WAP can be feasible in remote patient-monitoring and patient data retrieval.
KW - Blood pressure (BP)
KW - Common gateway interface (CGI)
KW - Patient-monitoring
KW - Relational database
KW - Telemedicine
KW - Wireless application protocol (WAP)
KW - Wireless electrocardiogram (ECG)
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0037774678&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/TITB.2003.811870
DO - 10.1109/TITB.2003.811870
M3 - Article
C2 - 12834165
AN - SCOPUS:0037774678
SN - 1089-7771
VL - 7
SP - 101
EP - 107
JO - IEEE Transactions on Information Technology in Biomedicine
JF - IEEE Transactions on Information Technology in Biomedicine
IS - 2
ER -