P. Johnson, THE CLINICAL AND ECONOMIC-ADVANTAGES OF REMOTE, COMMUNITY-BASED PHYSIOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT, Journal of telemedicine and telecare, 4, 1998, pp. 64-66
A prospective study documented the nutritional intakes of a large coho
rt of pregnant women living in Portsmouth and investigated the indepen
dent relationships of smoking, dietary intake and other maternal socio
-economic factors on outcome and cardiorespiratory function of the chi
ld during sleep at home at three weeks and three months of age. Unatte
nded overnight cardiorespiratory recording was performed and the data
stored in local memory before transmission on demand via modem to Oxfo
rd next morning. The telemetry of the physiological data, entirely man
aged by part-time community nurses in Portsmouth, was very successful.
Despite some losses, which included transmission failures, electrode
or lead disconnection, and monitor malfunction, 92% of the physiologic
al data were analysed at Oxford. Personalized physiological monitoring
in the community provides an opportunity for new evidence bases that
will enable a new level of individualized care.