Remote Monitoring Device
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A Remote Monitoring Device is a Device that is used for remote sensing.
- Context:
- It usually controlled and managed by a Remote Monitoring System.
- Example(s):
- Counter-Example(s):
- See: Wearable Medical Device, Remote Monitoring and Control (M&C) System, Remote Monitoring and Management (RMM) Process, Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM) System, Telemedicine, Digital Medicine, Remote Desktop Service (RDS), Remote Desktop Protocol, Remote Network Monitoring (RMON).
References
2021
- (FDA, 2021) ⇒ Remote or Wearable Patient Monitoring Devices EUAs. Last Updated: 07/15/2021
- QUOTE: Remote or wearable patient monitoring devices include (1) non-invasive remote monitoring devices that measure or detect common physiological parameters and, (2) non-invasive monitoring devices that wirelessly transmit patient information to their health care provider or other monitoring entity. The FDA has issued EUAs for certain remote or wearable patient monitoring devices to help increase the availability of monitoring and treatment of patients and to help address reduction of healthcare provider exposure to SARS-CoV-2 during the COVID-19 pandemic.
2017
- (Gil-Lebrero et al., 2017) ⇒ Sergio Gil-Lebrero, Francisco Javier Quiles-Latorre, Manuel Ortiz-Lopez, Victor Sanchez-Ruiz, Victoria Gamiz-Lopez, and Juan Jesus Luna-Rodriguez (2017). "Honey Bee Colonies Remote Monitoring System". In: MDPI-Sensors, 17(1), 55.
- QUOTE: We designed a remote monitoring system (called WBee) based on a hierarchical three-level model formed by the wireless node, a local data server, and a cloud data server. WBee is a low-cost, fully scalable, easily deployable system with regard to the number and types of sensors and the number of hives and their geographical distribution. WBee saves the data in each of the levels if there are failures in communication. In addition, the nodes include a backup battery, which allows for further data acquisition and storage in the event of a power outage.
2016
- (Steinhubl et al., 2016) ⇒ Steven R. Steinhubl, Evan D. Muse, and Eric J. Topo (2016). "The Emerging Field of Mobile Health". In: Science Translational Medicine, 7(283).
- QUOTE: These extraordinary advancements in mobile computer technology and connectivity have already transformed nearly every aspect of our lives: finance, travel, entertainment, education, and, of course, communications. However, only now are mobile health (mHealth) technologies making initial inroads into health care and, in so doing, are providing the foundation to radically transform the practice and reach of medical research and care. Through progressively miniaturized and increasingly powerful mobile computing capabilities, individuals are becoming increasingly capable of monitoring, tracking, and transmitting health metrics continuously and in real time. This metamorphosis has provided the potential for acute disease diagnosis and chronic condition management to take place outside the standard doctor’s office or hospital (Fig. 1).