February 3, 2015 Fraunhofer-Institut fuer Angewandte Informationstechnik (FIT) A new system aims to speed up the triage of victims during mass casualty incidents: Instead of colored paper tags, first responders use colored electronic wristbands. These serve to locate victims and transmit vital data to emergency response control centers. An app for Android smartphones also lets victims buried alive under a collapsed building contact rescue teams even though mobile phone networks are down.
Instead of colored paper tags, first responders use colored electronic wristbands. A new system aims to speed up the triage of victims during mass casualty incidents: Instead of colored paper tags, first responders use colored electronic wristbands. These serve to locate victims and transmit vital data to emergency response control centers. FIT also demonstrates an app for Android smartphones that lets victims buried alive under a collapsed building contact rescue teams even though mobile phone networks are down. Visit us at CeBIT, March 16 – 20, 2015, Hall 9, E40. In mass casualty incidents, triage of the victims must be performed as quickly as possible, in order to evacuate and take them to appropriate hospitals. Today, first responders use colored paper tags to classify victims. In cooperation with an international group of partners, Fraunhofer FIT has developed an electronic gadget that may replace the colored paper tags in a triage. Beyond just visually tagging a victim, the device transmits, in real time, the victim's location and vital data, e.g. heart rate, respiratory rate and oxygen saturation, to emergency response control centers. "The real-time data from the triage wrsitbands can be displayed on the large screens in the emergency response control center, but also on the tablets or smartphones of medical staff in the field. First responders and response coordinators thus have a precise picture of the situation on the ground. Rescuers see at a glance where the majority of severely injured casualties are located and can direct the rescue activities accordingly", explains Dr. René Reiners, project manager at Fraunhofer FIT. The system was developed in the European BRIDGE project (www.bridgeproject.eu) where FIT's User-Centered Computing department (headed by Dr. Markus Eisenhauer) is the technical coordinator. FIT will also demonstrate a pair of smartphone apps that lets victims communicate with first responders even if the mobile phone networks are down. One component of the solution is an app on the victim's smartphone. When the user activates it, it sets up a Wi-Fi access point and sends an emergency message, e.g. "Buried Alive", instead of the phone's regular Wi-Fi Service Identifier (SSID). The app on the first responder's phone scans for WLAN networks in its vicinity, detects the emergency message and sends a response signal to the victim's app. The solution we demonstrate uses stock Android smartphones that give it a range of up to 100 meters. Story Source: The above story is based on materials provided by Fraunhofer-Institut fuer Angewandte Informationstechnik (FIT). Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
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