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Continuous, Contact-Free Vitals Sensing and Analytics Help Tackle Failure-to-Rescue Challenges Faced by U.S. Hospitals

EarlySense Completes $39 Million Financing Round to Accelerate Global Expansion of Contact-Free Sensing and Analytics Solution

The world’s leading hospital bed manufacturer, Hill-Rom, has integrated continuous contact-free heart rate and respiratory rate sensing and analytics technology, from EarlySense, into their Centrella® Smart+ bed platform.

The Centrella bed, which offers optimised patient safety, enhanced patient satisfaction and advanced caregiver-focused technology, now allows for continuous monitoring of patients’ heart and respiratory rates over 100 times per minute without ever touching the patient. EarlySense® technology alerts clinicians to potential patient deterioration events much earlier than traditional monitoring methods, enabling health teams to intervene and avoid “failure to rescue” scenarios more effectively.

Specific improved clinical outcomes demonstrated with this technology include helping reduce mortality related to “code blue” events by 83 per cent [1], and cardiac arrests by 86 per cent. [2] In addition, clinicians reported overall hospital length-of-stay was reduced by 9 per cent [2], and ICU days by 45 per cent. [2] Several EarlySense customers have reported that the system also assisted with early detection of sepsis, a condition that, when not identified and treated rapidly, may be life-threatening.

“Hill-Rom’s Centrella bed is transforming inpatient care by integrating advanced sensing and analytics into the bed, offering a complete patient safety platform to assist clinicians in providing the highest level of care,” said John Groetelaars, president and CEO of Hill-Rom. “EarlySense has been used to effectively monitor close to a million patients, positively affecting patient outcomes. By integrating the EarlySense technology into our Centrella beds, we are ushering in a new era in quality of care, whereby all patients can be continuously monitored throughout their entire hospital stay.”

“No patient should deteriorate without prior warning in the hospital environment. Continuous vital signs measurement should be the standard of clinical practice in the United States,” said Dr. Frank Overdyk, a Charleston, SC-based anesthesiologist and expert on respiratory compromise. “Events such as opioid-induced respiratory depression and loss of life from failure-to-rescue are no longer acceptable given the availability of continuous vital signs monitoring.”

“We are proud to be Hill-Rom’s exclusive bed integration and nurse call communication partner, making our sensing and analytics technology available for more hospital patients and ensuring timely, effective clinical intervention is achieved,” said Avner Halperin, co-founder and CEO of EarlySense. “Integrating EarlySense monitoring capabilities with the Hill-Rom Centrella bed platform will advance our collective aspiration of having every patient in every hospital continuously monitored for safe, data-driven care, with the potential to save thousands of lives and significant costs for the healthcare system.”

 

1. White MD, “Early Detection of Patient Deterioration Using Novel Monitoring System,” results presented in ASCIP Conference, 2015.

2. The American Journal of Medicine. March 2014, Volume 127, Issue 3, Pages 226–232.

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