J
2022
A Sensor Network Utilizing Consumer Wearables for Telerehabilitation of Post-Acute COVID-19 Patients
BURES, Miroslav, Katerina NEUMANNOVA, Pavel BLAZEK, Matej KLIMA, Hynek SCHVACH et. al.
Basic information
Original name
A Sensor Network Utilizing Consumer Wearables for Telerehabilitation of Post-Acute COVID-19 Patients
Authors
BURES, Miroslav, Katerina NEUMANNOVA, Pavel BLAZEK, Matej KLIMA, Hynek SCHVACH, Jiri NEMA, Michal KOPECKY, Jan DYGRYN and Vladimir KOBLIZEK
Edition
IEEE INTERNET OF THINGS JOURNAL, UNITED STATES, IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC, 2022, 2327-4662
Other information
Type of outcome
Článek v odborném periodiku
Field of Study
30230 Other clinical medicine subjects
Country of publisher
Japan
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Impact factor
Impact factor: 10.600
Organization unit
Faculty of Medicine
Keywords (in Czech)
COVID-19; Internet of Things; personal wearables; sensor network; telecoaching; telerehabilitation
Keywords in English
COVID-19; Internet of Things; personal wearables; sensor network; telecoaching; telerehabilitation
Tags
International impact, Reviewed
V originále
A considerable number of patients with COVID-19 suffer from respiratory problems in the post-acute phase of the disease (the second–third month after disease onset). Individual telerehabilitation and telecoaching are viable, effective options for treating these patients. To treat patients individually, medical staff must have detailed knowledge of their physical activity and condition. A sensor network that utilizes medical-grade devices can be created to collect these data, but the price and availability of these devices might limit such a network’s scalability to larger groups of patients. Hence, the use of low-cost commercial fitness wearables is an option worth exploring. This article presents the concept and technical infrastructure of such a telerehabilitation program that started in April 2021 in the Czech Republic. A pilot controlled study with 14 patients with COVID-19 indicated the program’s potential to improve patients’ physical activity, (85.7% of patients in telerehabilitation versus 41.9% educational group) and exercise tolerance (71.4% of patients in telerehabilitation versus 42.8% of the educational group). Regarding the accuracy of collected data, the used commercial wristband was compared with the medical-grade device in a separate test. Evaluating equation M1-scores of the intensity of participants’ physical activity in this test, the difference in data is not statistically significant at level equation M2. Hence, the used infrastructure can be considered sufficiently accurate for the telerehabilitation program examined in this study. The technical and medical aspects of the problem are discussed, as well as the technical details of the solution and the lessons learned, regarding using this approach to treat COVID-19 patients in the post-acute phase.
Links
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