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Deployment of assistive living technology in a nursing home environment: methods and lessons learned

BACKGROUND: With an ever-growing ageing population, dementia is fast becoming the chronic disease of the 21(st) century. Elderly people affected with dementia progressively lose their autonomy as they encounter problems in their Activities of Daily Living (ADLs). Hence, they need supervision and ass...

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Autores principales: Aloulou, Hamdi, Mokhtari, Mounir, Tiberghien, Thibaut, Biswas, Jit, Phua, Clifton, Kenneth Lin, Jin Hong, Yap, Philip
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3691578/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23565984
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6947-13-42
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author Aloulou, Hamdi
Mokhtari, Mounir
Tiberghien, Thibaut
Biswas, Jit
Phua, Clifton
Kenneth Lin, Jin Hong
Yap, Philip
author_facet Aloulou, Hamdi
Mokhtari, Mounir
Tiberghien, Thibaut
Biswas, Jit
Phua, Clifton
Kenneth Lin, Jin Hong
Yap, Philip
author_sort Aloulou, Hamdi
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: With an ever-growing ageing population, dementia is fast becoming the chronic disease of the 21(st) century. Elderly people affected with dementia progressively lose their autonomy as they encounter problems in their Activities of Daily Living (ADLs). Hence, they need supervision and assistance from their family members or professional caregivers, which can often lead to underestimated psychological and financial stress for all parties. The use of Ambient Assistive Living (AAL) technologies aims to empower people with dementia and relieve the burden of their caregivers. The aim of this paper is to present the approach we have adopted to develop and deploy a system for ambient assistive living in an operating nursing home, and evaluate its performance and usability in real conditions. Based on this approach, we emphasise on the importance of deployments in real world settings as opposed to prototype testing in laboratories. METHODS: We chose to conduct this work in close partnership with end-users (dementia patients) and specialists in dementia care (professional caregivers). Our trial was conducted during a period of 14 months within three rooms in a nursing home in Singapore, and with the participation of eight dementia patients and two caregivers. A technical ambient assistive living solution, consisting of a set of sensors and devices controlled by a software platform, was deployed in the collaborating nursing home. The trial was preceded by a pre-deployment period to organise several observation sessions with dementia patients and focus group discussions with professional caregivers. A process of ground truth and system’s log data gathering was also planned prior to the trial and a system performance evaluation was realised during the deployment period with the help of caregivers. An ethical approval was obtained prior to real life deployment of our solution. RESULTS: Patients’ observations and discussions allowed us to gather a set of requirements that a system for elders with mild-dementia should fulfil. In fact, our deployment has exposed more concrete requirements and problems that need to be addressed, and which cannot be identified in laboratory testing. Issues that were neither forecasted during the design phase nor during the laboratory testing surfaced during deployment, thus affecting the effectiveness of the proposed solution. Results of the system performance evaluation show the evolution of system precision and uptime over the deployment phases, while data analysis demonstrates the ability to provide early detection of the degradation of patients’ conditions. A qualitative feedback was collected from caregivers and doctors and a set of lessons learned emerged from this deployment experience. (Continued on next page) (Continued from previous page) CONCLUSION: Lessons learned from this study were very useful for our research work and can serve as inspiration for developers and providers of assistive living services. They confirmed the importance of real deployment to evaluate assistive solutions especially with the involvement of professional caregivers. They also asserted the need for larger deployments. Larger deployments will allow to conduct surveys on assistive solutions social and health impact, even though they are time and manpower consuming during their first phases.
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spelling pubmed-36915782013-06-28 Deployment of assistive living technology in a nursing home environment: methods and lessons learned Aloulou, Hamdi Mokhtari, Mounir Tiberghien, Thibaut Biswas, Jit Phua, Clifton Kenneth Lin, Jin Hong Yap, Philip BMC Med Inform Decis Mak Research Article BACKGROUND: With an ever-growing ageing population, dementia is fast becoming the chronic disease of the 21(st) century. Elderly people affected with dementia progressively lose their autonomy as they encounter problems in their Activities of Daily Living (ADLs). Hence, they need supervision and assistance from their family members or professional caregivers, which can often lead to underestimated psychological and financial stress for all parties. The use of Ambient Assistive Living (AAL) technologies aims to empower people with dementia and relieve the burden of their caregivers. The aim of this paper is to present the approach we have adopted to develop and deploy a system for ambient assistive living in an operating nursing home, and evaluate its performance and usability in real conditions. Based on this approach, we emphasise on the importance of deployments in real world settings as opposed to prototype testing in laboratories. METHODS: We chose to conduct this work in close partnership with end-users (dementia patients) and specialists in dementia care (professional caregivers). Our trial was conducted during a period of 14 months within three rooms in a nursing home in Singapore, and with the participation of eight dementia patients and two caregivers. A technical ambient assistive living solution, consisting of a set of sensors and devices controlled by a software platform, was deployed in the collaborating nursing home. The trial was preceded by a pre-deployment period to organise several observation sessions with dementia patients and focus group discussions with professional caregivers. A process of ground truth and system’s log data gathering was also planned prior to the trial and a system performance evaluation was realised during the deployment period with the help of caregivers. An ethical approval was obtained prior to real life deployment of our solution. RESULTS: Patients’ observations and discussions allowed us to gather a set of requirements that a system for elders with mild-dementia should fulfil. In fact, our deployment has exposed more concrete requirements and problems that need to be addressed, and which cannot be identified in laboratory testing. Issues that were neither forecasted during the design phase nor during the laboratory testing surfaced during deployment, thus affecting the effectiveness of the proposed solution. Results of the system performance evaluation show the evolution of system precision and uptime over the deployment phases, while data analysis demonstrates the ability to provide early detection of the degradation of patients’ conditions. A qualitative feedback was collected from caregivers and doctors and a set of lessons learned emerged from this deployment experience. (Continued on next page) (Continued from previous page) CONCLUSION: Lessons learned from this study were very useful for our research work and can serve as inspiration for developers and providers of assistive living services. They confirmed the importance of real deployment to evaluate assistive solutions especially with the involvement of professional caregivers. They also asserted the need for larger deployments. Larger deployments will allow to conduct surveys on assistive solutions social and health impact, even though they are time and manpower consuming during their first phases. BioMed Central 2013-04-08 /pmc/articles/PMC3691578/ /pubmed/23565984 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6947-13-42 Text en Copyright © 2013 Aloulou et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Aloulou, Hamdi
Mokhtari, Mounir
Tiberghien, Thibaut
Biswas, Jit
Phua, Clifton
Kenneth Lin, Jin Hong
Yap, Philip
Deployment of assistive living technology in a nursing home environment: methods and lessons learned
title Deployment of assistive living technology in a nursing home environment: methods and lessons learned
title_full Deployment of assistive living technology in a nursing home environment: methods and lessons learned
title_fullStr Deployment of assistive living technology in a nursing home environment: methods and lessons learned
title_full_unstemmed Deployment of assistive living technology in a nursing home environment: methods and lessons learned
title_short Deployment of assistive living technology in a nursing home environment: methods and lessons learned
title_sort deployment of assistive living technology in a nursing home environment: methods and lessons learned
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3691578/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23565984
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6947-13-42
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