A Modern Health Care System Using Iot and Android.: Gipsa Alex, Benitta Varghese, Jezna G Jose, Albymol Abraham
A Modern Health Care System Using Iot and Android.: Gipsa Alex, Benitta Varghese, Jezna G Jose, Albymol Abraham
A Modern Health Care System Using Iot and Android.: Gipsa Alex, Benitta Varghese, Jezna G Jose, Albymol Abraham
Our system include a featured medicine box which is wirelessly connected to the hospital
administration.Hospital administration monitors the routine details through a webpage which is managed at the
hospital side.An android application is installed on the patients smartphone as well as in doctors
smartphone.Through this application patients could view their prescriptions,could make appointments and get
notofications regarding medicine intake.Doctors could view their patient details,could apply for leave.Another
intersting feature is the chat option provided.Both doctor and patient could chat using the application . Medicine
box is provided with different compartments . Whenever patient opens a wrong comaprtment,a buzzer will get
activated.The medication history will be automatically updated in the hospital webpage.An LED on top of each
compartment denote the correct box. When its time,the LED glows.If wrong compartment is open a buzzer will
get activated.
II. LITERATURE SURVEY
David Niewolny in his paper describes,How the Internet of Things Is Revolutionizing Healthcare [3] is
discussing about the reasons for emergence of IoT and designs of applications where IoT is used. The main
issue is people have only limited time, awareness and accuracy, which means they won’t be able to capture data
about things networked in the real world consistently. The answer is empowering devices to collect information
on their own, without any human interference. A smart health monitoring chair is introduced by H. Baek , G.
Chung, K. Kim, and K. Park for non-invasive bio-signal measurement. However, these solutions are almost
exclusively implemented using off-the-shelf components. Its physical size, rigid nature, and short battery life
become limiting factors for potential long-term use. Remote monitoring[4] of medication uses Zigbee
technology was proposed by A. J. Jara, M. A. Zamora-Izquierdo, and A. F. Skarmeta for getting sensor values.
Zigbee can transfer sensor values effectively but when there is a need of continuous data transmission zigbee
cannot be used. Reducing sampling rate solves the above problem but affects the quality of signals.
III. BASIC ARCHITECTURE
I.MEDICINE BOX
People often forget to take their medicines at the right time in this busy world especially elderly people.
Medicine box has three compartments. An LED is attached with each compartment. When it’s time to take
medicine LED from the right compartment glows. If wrong compartment is opened then the buzzer will get
activated. A wifi shield is attached to the arduino board which automatically updates these details to the hospital
webpage. The Medbox could be integrated with sensors. A temperature sensor is integrated here with the box. It
reads patients temperature value and notifies if it goes beyond a limit.
there is change in dosage of medicines, it will be notified in the server and notifications are updated in the
patients android app.
c) Hardware Unit
The hardware unit comprises of three compartments each with an LED to indicate which box to be taken. Each
box has a reed switch and magnet to ensure whether box is closed or opened. An arduino board with Ethernet
shield is present. A buzzer get activated whenever a wrong compartment is opened. Sensors can be attached
with box to note vital signs of patient.
V. CONCLUSION
Health IOT thus helps the hospital authorities to have continous monitoring on the patients as well as it reminds
the patient to have the medicines on time.
So the doctor can have direct view over his patients by this.Thus the medication procedures can be shifted from
hospital centric to home centric. As a future work it is possible to incorporate lcd screens on to the medicine
box that could be made as an interface between the patient and the doctor to have a video conference and also
provide details regarding the changes in the consumption of medicine without consulting doctor directly.
REFFERENCES
[1] Geng Yang, Li Xie, Matti Mäntysalo, Xiaolin Zhou,Zhibo Pang, Li Da Xu, Senior,Sharon Kao-Walter, Qiang Chen, and Li-Rong
Zheng, “A Health-IoT Platform Based on the Integration of Intelligent Packaging, Unobtrusive Bio-Sensor, and Intelligent Medicine
Box,” IEEE Transaction Industrial Informatics, vol. 10, no. 4, november 2014.
[2] J¨urgen Morak, Hannes Kumpusch, Dieter Hayn, Robert Modre-Osprian, and G¨unter Schreier, Member, IEEE” Design and Evaluation
of a Telemonitoring ConceptBased on NFC-Enabled Mobile Phonesand Sensor Devices” vol. 16, no. 1, january 2012.
[3] H. Baek, G. Chung, K. Kim, and K. Park, “A smart health monitoring chair for nonintrusive measurement of biological signals,” IEEE
Trans. Inf.Technol. Biomed., vol. 16, no. 1, pp. 150–158, Jan. 2011.
[4] A. J. Jara, M. A. Zamora-Izquierdo, and A. F. Skarmeta, “Interconnection framework for mhealth and remote monitoring based on the
Internet of Things,” IEEE J. Sel. Areas Commun., vol. 31, no. 9, pp. 47–65, Sep. 2013.
[5] D. Curone, E. L. Secco, A. Tognetti, G. Loriga, G. Dudnik, M. Risatti et al., “Smart garments for emergency operators: The ProeTEX
project,” IEEE Trans. Inf. Technol. Biomed., vol. 14, no. 3, pp. 694–701, May 2010.
[6] B. Schuz et al., “Medication beliefs predict medication adherence in older adults with multiple illnesses,” J. Psychosom. Res., vol. 70,
no. 2, pp. 179–187, 2011.
[7] S. Coyle et al., “BIOTEX—Biosensing textiles for personalised healthcare management,” IEEE Trans. Inf. Technol. Biomed., vol. 14,
no. 2, pp. 364–370, Mar. 2010.