TERVA: system for long-term monitoring of wellness at home

Telemedicine Journal and E-health : the Official Journal of the American Telemedicine Association
I KorhonenV Turjanmaa

Abstract

Long-term monitoring of physiological and psychosocial variables in out-hospital conditions would be beneficial for investigating changes in wellness status of an individual or to understand interaction between physiological and behavioral processes. We aimed to design a personal wellness monitoring system (TERVA), which would allow monitoring of wellness-related variables at home for several weeks or even months. The designed TERVA system runs on a laptop computer and interfaces with different measurement devices through a serial interface. Measured variables include beat-to-beat heart rate, motor activity, blood pressure, weight, body temperature, respiration, ballistocardiography, movements, and sleep stages. In addition, self-assessments of daily well-being and activities are stored by keeping a behavioral diary. To test the system, one healthy man used the system for 10 weeks. The system was successfully applied in out-hospital conditions. The success rate of the measurements was 70-91%, depending on the variable under consideration. The pilot study indicated that the recorded data accurately reflected the health status of the subject. The TERVA system provides a method to record and investigate wellness-related data over ...Continue Reading

References

Jan 1, 1986·Journal of Chronic Diseases·S M FinkelsteinL B Ewing
May 1, 1993·International Journal of Bio-medical Computing·B H Jansen, K Shankar
Mar 1, 1997·IEEE Transactions on Bio-medical Engineering·A RuhaS Nissilä
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Citations

Jul 9, 2003·IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Magazine : the Quarterly Magazine of the Engineering in Medicine & Biology Society·Ilkka KorhonenMark van Gils
Jan 24, 2007·Journal of Medical Internet Research·Jennifer S BeaudinMargaret E Morris
Feb 28, 2006·Physiology & Behavior·M T TuomistoV Turjanmaa

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