Caregiver and staff information system

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 11257588
  • Patent Number
    11,257,588
  • Date Filed
    Tuesday, February 16, 2021
    3 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, February 22, 2022
    2 years ago
Abstract
A mobile caregiver application is stored on mobile devices of caregivers for managing alert messages generated by a variety of equipment in a healthcare information system. The mobile caregiver application allows secure voice, text, and, optionally, video communication between caregivers using their mobile devices.
Description
BACKGROUND

The present disclosure relates to healthcare information systems and particularly, to caregiver and staff information systems. More particularly, the present disclosure relates to a system that provides information to wireless handheld devices of caregivers and staff relating to alerts originating from patients in a healthcare facility and that permit secure communications between groups of caregivers, staff, and patients.


Caregivers, such as nurses and other clinicians, are typically assigned to multiple patients during their shifts. Various alerts or nurse calls generated by patients are communicated to the caregivers who must prioritize and manage their responses to the incoming alerts. Sometimes an alert is escalated to a secondary caregiver if the alert is not responded to within a threshold amount of time. Alerts and calls may be categorized as normal calls or high priority calls. Other staff members such as those in housekeeping, food service, and patient transporting, also respond to various alerts and calls originating from multiple patients. The terms “caregiver” and “staff” are used interchangeably herein.


Healthcare facilities sometimes provide to caregivers and staff during their shifts wireless communication devices, such as pagers or telephone handsets that have screens that show incoming patient calls and alerts. At the end of their shifts, the caregivers and staff may return these wireless communication devices back to the healthcare facility such as for recharging or for use by other caregivers and staff on subsequent shifts. Thus, these prior art wireless communication devices are dedicated devices used mostly for limited types of communications relating to patient healthcare.


In more recent times, it is common for caregivers and staff to bring their own smart phones to work. Caregivers and staff may call each other or text each other using their own smart phones while at work for purposes of coordinating patient care. Of course, the smart phones have their regular, unrestricted communications capability as well such that calls and texts can be transmitted by caregivers and staff via public infrastructure to their friends and family, for example. This raises various concerns regarding patient privacy and confidentiality. What is needed is an application that can be downloaded to the personal smart phones of caregivers and staff, that has functionality for managing calls and alerts within the healthcare facility, and that has secure communications capability between caregivers and staff in a healthcare facility.


SUMMARY

An apparatus, system, method, or computer-storage medium may comprise one or more of the features recited in the appended claims and/or the following features which, alone or in any combination, may comprise patentable subject matter:


A machine readable medium for managing patient calls and alerts at a healthcare facility may be provided. The machine readable medium may be non-transitory and may comprise a plurality of instructions that, in response to being executed, may result in a mobile device of a caregiver receiving at the mobile device multiple alerts that may relate to multiple patients that may be assigned to the caregiver; displaying on a display screen of the mobile device a first list of accepted alerts that the caregiver may have accepted and that may not have been escalated to another caregiver; and displaying on the display screen of the mobile device a second list of escalated alerts that may have been escalated to the caregiver from another caregiver.


In some embodiments, the accepted alerts and the escalated alerts may be displayed simultaneously on the display screen of the mobile device. Optionally, displaying the first list of accepted alerts may include displaying whether each accepted alert is either a high priority alert or a normal priority alert. Alternatively or additionally, displaying the first list of accepted alerts may include displaying for each accepted alert a name of a patient and a room location of the patient from which the alert may have originated. Further optionally, displaying the first list of accepted alerts may include displaying for each accepted alert an amount of time that may have elapsed since the respective accepted alert may have been originated.


In some embodiments, displaying the second list of escalated alerts may include displaying whether each escalated alert is either a high priority alert or a normal priority alert. Optionally, displaying the second list of escalated alerts may include displaying for each escalated alert a name of a patient and a room location of the patient from which the alert may have originated. Alternatively or additionally, displaying the second list of escalated alerts may include displaying for each escalated alert an amount of time that may have elapsed since the respective escalated alert may have been originated.


If desired, displaying each of the accepted alerts and the escalated alerts may include displaying a type of each of the accepted alerts and escalated alerts. For example, the types of accepted and escalated alerts may include one or more of the following: Fall, Bathroom, Room Service or Juice.


In some embodiments, the machine readable medium may be configured to result in displaying a name of the caregiver of the mobile device and a location of the caregiver. A first icon indicating the caregiver's availability status for accepting more alerts may be displayed. Optionally, a second icon that may be selectable by the caregiver to change the availability status may also be displayed. In response to selection of the second icon by the caregiver, a menu of availability status choices may be displayed. For example, the availability status choices may include two or more of the following: All, Available, Busy, or Unavailable. It is contemplated by this disclosure that the display screen of the mobile device may display an accept icon that may be selectable by the caregiver to accept another escalated alert from another caregiver.


In some embodiments, a menu bar including selectable icons that may include a Patients icon, a Staff icon, a first Messages icon, and a Me icon may be displayed. In response to selection of the Patients icon by the caregiver, a list of patients that may be assigned to the caregiver may be displayed. Displaying the list of patients that may be assigned to the caregiver may include displaying a name of each assigned patient and a room location of each assigned patient. In response to selection of the Staff icon by the caregiver, a default staff screen that may show a list of staff members that are assigned to a same unit as the caregiver may be displayed.


According to some embodiments of the present disclosure, a Unit icon may be displayed on the default staff screen. The Unit icon may be selectable by the caregiver to display a list of staff members that may be assigned to other units. Alternatively or additionally, a Filter icon may be displayed on the default staff screen. The Filter icon may be selectable by the caregiver to display a list of staff roles that may be selectable by the caregiver. If desired, a list of staff members that may have the one or more selected staff roles may also be displayed. Examples of the staff roles on the list may include one or more of the following: All, ANEST, Clergy, CMA, CN, CNA, HN, HUC, LPN, MD, MGR, NA, None, QB Tech, PCA, RN, Vol, Unit Sec, or CRNA.


In some embodiments, in response to selection of the Filter icon, an availability menu may be provided and may be usable by the caregiver to filter staff members for display based on an availability status of the staff members. A My Team icon that may be selectable by the caregiver to display a list of staff members that are on a same team as the caregiver may be displayed on the default staff screen.


In response to selection of the first Messages icon by the caregiver, a messages menu including a Device icon, a Video icon, a second Messages icon, and a Mobile icon may be displayed. In response to selection of the Video icon, the caregiver may be provided with the ability to establish a secure video communications link with another caregiver. For example, a Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) stack may be implemented in connection with the video communications link. In response to selection of the second Messages icon, the caregiver may be provided with the ability to send a secure text message to another caregiver. For example, a Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) stack may be implemented in connection with sending secure text messages. In response to selection of the Mobile icon, the caregiver may be provided with the ability to place a telephone call.


In some embodiments, the plurality of instructions, in response to being executed, may result in the mobile device of the caregiver determining at the mobile device received signal strength indicators (RSSI's) for communications from a plurality of other mobile devices of other caregivers and may display a rank ordered list of the other caregivers on the mobile device of the caregiver based on the RSSI's. For example, the rank ordered list may be displayed so as to list the other caregivers from closest to farthest in distance from the mobile device based on the received signal strengths.


Optionally, the plurality of instructions, in response to being executed, may result in the mobile device of the caregiver displaying on the display screen of the mobile device a first selectable icon that, in response to being selected, may result in the caregiver's availability status being set to an automatic mode in which the caregiver's availability may be changed automatically as the caregiver moves throughout the healthcare facility. Alternatively or additionally, the plurality of instructions, in response to being executed, may result in the mobile device of the caregiver displaying on the display screen of the mobile device a second selectable icon that, in response to being selected, may result in the caregiver's availability being set to a do not disturb mode in which the caregiver is unavailable. The mobile device may be configured to not receive alerts when the caregiver's availability is set to the do not disturb mode.


In some embodiments, a Busy screen may be displayed on the mobile device and the caregiver's availability may be set to busy in response to the caregiver entering a patient room. If desired, the Busy screen may include a selectable icon that, in response to being selected, may result in the caregiver's availability being set to a do not disturb mode in which the caregiver may be unavailable. In some embodiments, an Available screen may be displayed on the mobile device and the caregiver's availability may be set to available in response to the caregiver being located in a common area of the healthcare facility outside of patient rooms. Optionally, the Available screen may include a selectable icon that, in response to being selected, may result in the caregiver's availability being set to a do not disturb mode in which the caregiver is unavailable.


It is contemplated by this disclosure that the plurality of instructions, in response to being executed, may result in the mobile device of the caregiver displaying on the display screen of the mobile device a first selectable icon that, in response to being selected, may result in the caregiver's availability being set to a do not disturb mode in which the caregiver is unavailable. The mobile device may be configured to not receive alerts when the caregiver's availability is set to the do not disturb mode. The do not disturb mode may last for a threshold period of time and then automatically may expire after the threshold period of time unless action is taken to terminate the do not disturb mode early or extend the do not disturb mode for additional time.


If desired, the plurality of instructions, in response to being executed, may result in the mobile device of the caregiver displaying a graphical end icon that, in response to being selected, may terminate the do not disturb mode and may set the caregiver's availability to available. Alternatively or additionally, the plurality of instructions, in response to being executed, may result in the mobile device of the caregiver displaying a graphical add time icon that, in response to being selected, may add a predetermined amount of time to the threshold period of time to establish a new threshold period of time. For example, the predetermined amount of time may be five minutes.


According to another aspect of the present disclosure, a system may include a plurality of mobile devices that may be carried by caregivers, at least one server for sending alert messages to the plurality of mobile devices; and at least one patient device in a patient room. The at least one patient device may be configured to generate a first alert message of the alert messages in response to an interaction with a patient in the patient room. The system may also have a processor located at the patient room. The processor may receive the first alert message and may determine a message priority designation from a first priority designation or a second priority designation. The processor may forward the alert message along with the message priority designation for receipt by the server which then may forward the alert message and the priority designation to at least one mobile device of a caregiver assigned to the patient. The plurality of mobile devices may be configured to permit the caregivers to accept responsibility for responding to respective alert messages or to re-route respective alert messages to one or more other caregivers.


In some embodiments, the system further may include an audio station that may be located in the patient room and that may be coupled to the processor. Each mobile device of the plurality of mobile devices may be configured to display an icon for each respective alert message that may be selectable by the respective caregiver to open up a communications channel with the audio station so that the caregiver can speak with the patient.


According to a further aspect of the present disclosure, a system may include a plurality of mobile devices that may be carried by caregivers, at least one server for sending alert messages to the plurality of mobile devices, and a plurality of patient devices in a patient room. The plurality of patient devices may be configured to generate the alert messages in response to interactions with a patient in the patient room. The plurality of patient devices may include a patient bed, a pillow speaker unit, and a patient tablet, for example.


In some embodiments, the system may further include a processor located at the patient room. The processor may receive the alert messages and may determine for each alert message a message priority designation from a first priority designation or a second priority designation. The processor may forward each alert message along with its respective message priority designation for receipt by the server which then may forward the respective alert message and the respective priority designation to at least one mobile device of a caregiver assigned to the patient. If desired, the plurality of mobile devices may be configured to permit the caregivers to accept responsibility for responding to respective alert messages or to re-route respective alert messages to other caregivers.


In some embodiments, the system may further include a desktop computer that may have a display on which a Past Conversation screen may be displayed. The Past Conversation screen may be usable to view a past text message conversation between other caregivers about a selected patient. Optionally, the Past Conversation screen also may display a current availability status of each of the caregivers involved in the past text message conversation.


In some embodiments, the system may further include a desktop computer that may have a display on which a Create Conversation screen is displayed. The Create Conversation screen may be usable to start a text message conversation between a user of the desktop computer and one or more other caregivers about a selected patient. The Create Conversation screen may permit selection of the patient about which the text message conversation pertains by using a first drop down menu that may list all patients admitted in a unit or by using a second drop down menu that may appear on the Create Conversation screen in response typing a portion of a patient name. Alternatively or additionally, the Create Conversation screen may permit selection of the one or more other caregivers to participate in the text message conversation by using a first drop down menu that may list all caregivers on duty in a unit or by using a second drop down menu that may appear on the Create Conversation screen in response typing a portion of a caregiver name. If desired, the Create Conversation screen may include an icon that may be selectable to designate all caregivers on duty in the unit as participants in the text message conversation. Optionally, the Create Conversation screen may display an availability status of each of the caregivers involved in the text message conversation.


According to yet another aspect of the present disclosure, a system may include a plurality of mobile devices that may be carried by caregivers, a messaging server for sending alert messages to the plurality of mobile devices, and a first nurse call server in communication with a first plurality of patient devices in a first patient room. The first plurality of patient devices may be configured to generate first alert messages in response to interactions with a first patient in the first patient room. The first alert messages may be communicated in a first format according to a first protocol to the messaging server which, in turn, may provide first notifications to one or more mobile devices of the plurality of mobile devices. The system also may include a second nurse call server in communication with a second plurality of patient devices in a second patient room. The second plurality of patient devices may be configured to generate second alert messages in response to interactions with a second patient in the second patient room. The system further may include a configuration server in communication with the second nurse call server. The second alert messages may be communicated in a second format according to a second protocol, different than the first format and first protocol, respectively, to the messaging server which, in turn, may convert the second alert messages into third alert messages having the first format according to the first protocol. The third alert messages may be communicated to the messaging server which, in turn, may provide second notifications to one or more mobile devices of the plurality of mobile devices.


In some embodiments, the system may further include a Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) server and a private branch exchange (PBX) voice bridge. Voice communications from the plurality of mobile phones may be communicated to the first nurse call server via the SIP server without involving the PBX voice bridge, and voice communications from the plurality of mobile phones may be communicated to the second nurse call server via the SIP server and the PBX voice bridge. Alternatively or additionally, the system may further include a publish/subscribe server that may manage which mobile phones of the plurality of mobile phones are to receive each alert message of the first and third alert messages. The first alert messages from the first nurse call server and the third alert messages from the configuration server may be provided to the publish/subscribe server as inputs and the publish/subscribe server may send outputs to the messaging server.


It is contemplated by this disclosure that the first plurality of patient devices may include a first patient bed, a first pillow speaker unit, and a first patient tablet. Alternatively or additionally, the second plurality of patient devices may include a second patient bed, a second pillow speaker unit, and a second patient tablet. At least one mobile device of the plurality of mobile devices may stores and may execute a machine readable medium having any one or more of the features or functions discussed above and discussed elsewhere herein.


Additional features, which alone or in combination with any other feature(s), such as those listed above and those listed in the claims, may comprise patentable subject matter and will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon consideration of the following detailed description of various embodiments exemplifying the best mode of carrying out the embodiments as presently perceived.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The detailed description particularly refers to the accompanying figures in which:



FIG. 1 is block diagram of a caregiver and staff information system showing a number of caregiver and staff phones that operate a caregiver and staff communication software application for use in monitoring patient calls and alerts originating from assigned patients and various hospital equipment including patient beds, patient tablets, call switches, and pillow speaker units;



FIG. 2 is a screen shot of a Staff Detail screen showing a list of accepted alerts and escalated alerts of an individual caregiver, the Staff Detail screen being shown in response to a Me icon being selected on a main menu at a bottom of the screen;



FIG. 3 is a screen shot of a Staff Detail screen showing a list of staff assigned to nursing unit four (NU4) with green and red circles indicating the availability status for each listed caregiver, the Staff Detail screen being shown in response to a Staff icon being selected on the main menu at the bottom of the screen;



FIG. 4 is a screen shot of a first Filter screen having an Availability filter expanded to show availability filter options that can be selected by the caregiver;



FIG. 5 is a screen shot of a second Filter screen having a Staff Title filter expanded to show staff title filter options that can be selected by the caregiver;



FIG. 6 is a screen shot of a My Team screen showing a list of staff assigned to the same team as the caregiver;



FIG. 7 is a screen shot of a Staff Detail screen that results in response to a staff member being selected on the My Team screen, the Staff Detail screen showing a list of patients assigned to the selected staff member and a set of communication icons that are selectable to communicate with the selected staff member via different communication methods;



FIG. 8 is a screen shot of an Alert History screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to selection of a Me icon, the Alert History screen showing a list of open alerts and a list of accepted alerts for the caregiver;



FIG. 9 is a screen shot of a My Unit screen showing a list of staff assigned to the same unit as the caregiver;



FIG. 10 is a screen shot, similar to FIG. 7, of an alternative Staff Detail screen that results in response to a staff member being selected on the My Unit screen of FIG. 9, the alternative Staff Detail screen showing a list of patients assigned to the selected staff member and a set of communication icons that are selectable to communicate with the selected staff member via different communication methods;



FIG. 11 is a screen shot of a Call screen that results when a Device icon is selected on the alternative Staff Detail screen of FIG. 10 to call the mobile device of the selected staff member;



FIG. 12 is a screen shot of a My Patients List screen showing a list of patients assigned to the caregiver, the My Patients List screen being shown in response to a Patients icon being selected on the main menu at the bottom of the screen;



FIG. 13 is a screen shot of a Patient Details screen showing a list of caregivers assigned to a patient selected on the My Patients List screen of FIG. 12 and showing a Room icon that can be selected to call the room in which the patient is assigned;



FIG. 14 is a screen shot of a Call screen that results when the Device icon of FIG. 13 is selected to call the patient's room;



FIG. 15 is a screen shot of a Home screen of the caregiver's mobile device showing an icon or tile in the in the lower right corner, but above the main menu bar at the bottom of the screen, to indicate that the caregiver and staff communication software application has been downloaded (or uploaded) to the caregiver's mobile device and showing an incoming alert message at the top of the screen;



FIG. 16 is a screen shot of a Call Details screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to the incoming alert message of FIG. 15 being selected by the caregiver, the Call Details screen including buttons or icons that are selectable by the caregiver to accept responsibility for responding to the alert message, to accept responsibility for responding to the alert message and to place a call to the room of the patient from which the alert message originated, or to escalate the alert message to another caregiver;



FIG. 17 is a screen shot of a Patient Detail screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to a patient name being selected on the Staff Detail screen of FIG. 7, the Patient Detail screen including an upper section having information indicating the patient's location, date of birth, sex, and medical risks, and having a set of icons including one that permits the caregiver to call into the patient's room and the Patient Detail screen having a bottom section including icons for selecting a Care Team list, patient notes, and call history;



FIG. 18 is a screen shot of a Set States screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to a Set States icon being selected on the Patient Detail screen of FIG. 17, the Set States screen including a menu having selections for Out of Room, Falls Risk, NPO, No Latex, Sleeping, and Procedure in Progress;



FIG. 19 is screen shot of a Staff Member Detail screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to selection of a staff member's name on any screen having a list of staff members such as the screens of FIGS. 3, 6 and 9, the Staff Member Detail screen having a list of active calls for the selected staff member;



FIG. 20 is screen shot of a Favorites screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to a Favorites icon being selected on the Staff Member Detail screen of FIG. 19, the Favorites screen including a list of favorite contacts for the selected caregiver;



FIG. 21 is a screen shot of an Add Favorites screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to an Add icon being selected on the Favorites screen of FIG. 20, the Add Favorites screen including a window for selecting whether a favorite is to be added by typing a phone number or by picking a staff or location;



FIG. 22 is a screen shot of a New Favorites screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to a Type a Phone Number icon being selected on the Add Favorites screen of FIG. 21, the New Favorites screen including fields for typing a Name and Phone Number of the staff member to be added as a new favorite;



FIG. 23 is a screen shot of a first Change Availability screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to selection of a down arrow icon that appears on the screens of FIGS. 2 and 8, the first Change Availability screen permits the caregiver to select a Do Not Disturb time interval during which no new incoming alerts will be received and during which the caregiver will be designated as unavailable, the Change availability screen also having a Sign Out icon that is selected by the caregiver to sign out at the end of their shift;



FIG. 24 is a screen shot of a second Change Availability screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to selection of a Change icon that appears on the screens of FIGS. 19 and 20 if a Do Not Disturb time interval has been previously set, the second Change Availability screen permits the caregiver to end the Do Not Disturb time interval and also has the Sign Out icon that is selected by the caregiver to sign out at the end of their shift;



FIG. 25 is a screen shot of a Messages screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to selection of a Messages icon of the main menu shown at the bottom of the mobile device, the Message screen having a list of message strings in which the caregiver has been involved in the past;



FIG. 26 is a screen shot of a New Message screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to a New Message icon being selected on the Messages screen of FIG. 25, the New Message screen having a “Tap here to search your unit” icon in the To field and having plus sign (“+”) icons in the To filed and the About field;



FIG. 27 is a screen shot of a first Search Results screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device after selection of the plus sign (“+”) icon in the To field of FIG. 26 and after the search string “Arm” has been entered into the search string as search criteria, the first Search Results screen listing two caregivers that met the search criteria and having a keyboard at the bottom of the screen for typing a message;



FIG. 28 is a screen shot of a My Team screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to selection of the “Tap here to search your unit” icon on the screen of FIG. 26, the My Team screen having a list of the caregiver's team members to whom messages can be sent and having a My Unit icon which can be selected to display a list of staff members in the caregiver's unit rather than the team members;



FIG. 29 is a screen shot of a second Search Results screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device after selection of the plus sign (“+”) icon in the About field of FIG. 26 and after the search string “Mon” has been entered into About field as search criteria, the second Search Results screen listing one patient that met the search criteria and having a keyboard at the bottom of the screen for typing a message;



FIG. 30 is a screen shot of a My Patients screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to selection of a plus sign (“+”) icon on the screen of FIG. 29 in the About field, the My Patients screen having a list of the patients assigned to the caregiver to whom messages can be sent and having a My Unit icon which can be selected to display a list of patients in the caregiver's unit rather than just the caregiver's assigned patients;



FIG. 31 is a screen shot of a Sent Message screen showing an example of a message that has been sent by the caregiver using their mobile device;



FIG. 32 is a screen shot of a Message String screen showing examples of a message string between the caregiver and two other caregivers;



FIG. 33 is a screen shot of a Conversation Details screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to an information (“i”) icon being selected on the screen of FIG. 32 showing a list of participants to the message string of FIG. 32;



FIG. 34 is a screen shot, similar to FIG. 17, of a Care Team screen that appears on a caregiver's phone who does not have administrative rights to set states for the respective patient, the Care Team screen including an upper section having information indicating the patient's location, date of birth, sex, and medical risks, and having a Call Room icon that permits the caregiver to call into the patient's room and the Care Team screen having a bottom section including a Care Team list and icons for messaging or calling members of the listed care team;



FIG. 35 is a Patient Notes screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to selection of a Pt. Notes icon on the screen of FIG. 34, the Patient Notes screen having caregiver's notes about the patient in the bottom section;



FIG. 36 is a History screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to selection of a History icon on the screen of FIG. 34 or FIG. 35, the History screen having a history of the patient's nurse calls in the bottom section, including nurse calls that are still open;



FIG. 37 is a screen shot, similar to FIG. 9, of an alternative My Unit screen showing a list of staff assigned to the same unit as the caregiver;



FIG. 38 is a screen shot of an Other Units screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to selection of an Other Units icon on the screen of FIG. 37, the Other Units screen having a list of other units of first and second hospital campuses;



FIG. 39 is a screen shot of a Non-Home Results screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to selection of a unit from a hospital campus different than the caregiver's campus on the Other Units screen of FIG. 38;



FIG. 40 is a screen shot of a Tapped Search screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to selection of a “Tap to search” icon at the top of the screens of FIG. 37 or FIG. 39, the Tapped Search screen having a list of different types of staff searches that can be undertaken by the caregiver;



FIG. 41 is a screen shot of a first Search Results page that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to a search string “Carol” being entered in a “What are you looking for?” field at the top of the Tapped Search screen of FIG. 40;



FIG. 42 is a screen shot of a second Search Results page that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to a search string “Onc” being entered in the “What are you looking for?” field at the top of the Tapped Search screen of FIG. 40;



FIG. 43 is a screen shot of a third Search Results page that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to a search string “4” being entered in the “What are you looking for?” field at the top of the Tapped Search screen of FIG. 40;



FIG. 44 is a screen shot of a fourth Search Results page that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to a search string “XYZ” being entered in the “What are you looking for?” field at the top of the Tapped Search screen of FIG. 40;



FIG. 45 is a screen shot of a Dial Pad screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to selection of a Mobile icon, shown in FIG. 7, or a phone icon such as those shown in FIGS. 13, 17, 20, 34 and 43;



FIG. 46 is a screen shot of a Recent Phone Calls screen that appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to selection of a Recents icon on the Dial Pad screen of FIG. 45;



FIG. 47 is a block diagram showing a mobile device of a caregiver that has received signal strength indication (RSSI) software to determine a distance between the caregiver and other caregivers labeled as Staff 1-5 and showing a screen of the mobile device rank ordering the Staff 1-5 based on relative location, closest to farthest, from the caregiver;



FIG. 48 is a screen shot of an Availability screen that a caregiver uses to select an Automatic availability function in which the caregiver's availability status changes automatically as the caregiver moves about a healthcare facility and to select a Do Not Disturb function in which the caregiver ceases to receive alerts and is indicated as unavailable on other devices of the system;



FIG. 49 is a block diagram of a network architecture implementing an embodiment of a caregiver and staff information system in which a healthcare facility has two different types of nurse call systems;



FIG. 50 is a screen shot of a first My Availability screen showing that a caregiver has three minutes remaining of a Do Not Disturb status and showing a graphical End button that the caregiver selects to end the Do Not Disturb status and a graphical +5 min. button that the caregiver selects to extend the Do Not Disturb status by an additional five minutes;



FIG. 51 is a screen shot of a second My Availability screen showing that a caregiver has a status of Busy (in patient room) and showing a graphical Begin Do Not Disturb button that the caregiver selects to change their status to Do Not Disturb;



FIG. 52 is a screen shot of a third My Availability screen showing that a caregiver has a status of Available and showing the graphical Begin Do Not Disturb button that the caregiver selects to change their status to Do Not Disturb;



FIG. 53 is a screen shot showing a Past Conversation screen displayed on a desktop display screen of a computer that is used to view a past text message conversation between other caregivers about a particular patient and showing, at the top of the text message conversation, the current availability status of the caregivers involved in the past text message conversation;



FIG. 54 is a screen shot showing a Create Conversation screen displayed on a desktop display screen of a computer that is used to create a text message conversation with one or more other caregivers about a particular patient and showing, at the top of the text message conversation, a caregiver designated as a participant in the text message conversation;



FIG. 55 is a screen shot, similar to FIG. 54, showing an example of a drop down menu of patient names and locations that appears on the Create Conversation screen in response to a portion of a room number being typed in an About text field near the top of the Create Conversation screen;



FIG. 56 is a screen shot, similar to FIG. 54, showing an example of a drop down menu of patient names and locations that appears on the Create Conversation screen in response to selection of a down arrow icon appearing on the right hand side of the About text field;



FIG. 57 is a screen shot, similar to FIG. 54, showing an example of a drop down menu of caregiver names and availability status that appears on the Create Conversation screen in response to a portion of a caregiver name being typed in a Participant text field near the top of the Create Conversation screen;



FIG. 58 is a screen shot, similar to FIG. 54, showing an example of a drop down menu of caregiver names and availability status that appears on the Create Conversation screen in response to selection of a staff icon appearing to the right of the Participants text field; and



FIG. 59 is a screen shot, similar to FIG. 54, showing a list of an entire care team of Participants appearing in the Participants text field in response to an Add Care Team icon being selected on the Create Conversation screen after a patient name is added in the About text field.





DETAILED DESCRIPTION

A caregiver and staff information system 50 has a number of mobile devices 52, illustratively caregiver and staff phones, that each operate a caregiver and staff communication software application for use in monitoring patient calls and alerts originating from assigned patients and various hospital equipment located in a room of the patient, including patient beds 54, patient tablets 56, call switches 58, and handheld pillow speaker units 60 as shown in FIG. 1. In the illustrative example, alerts may also originate from a smoke alarm 61, for example. The features and functions of the caregiver and staff communication software application of mobile devices 52 are discussed in detail below in connection with FIGS. 2-46. The caregiver and staff communication software application is sometimes referred to herein as the mobile caregiver application.


In contemplated embodiments, the mobile caregiver application is configured to allow caregivers in an acute care setting to use their mobile phones 52 for monitoring alerts and calls from patients; for conducting voice, video, and text messaging between caregivers; and for permitting voice communications to audio stations (e.g., standard audio stations 62 and/or graphical audio stations 64) mounted in patient rooms adjacent to respective patient beds 54. The mobile caregiver application is also configured to act as a secondary notification system that supplements the nurse call system portion of system 50.


In the illustrative example, beds 54 and pillow speaker units 60 are coupled with appropriate cables, well known in the art, to respective audio station bed connectors (ASBC's) 66 as shown diagrammatically in FIG. 1. In other embodiments, one or more network interface units (NIU's) or wireless interface units (WIU's) provide the connectivity between beds 54 and respective audio stations 62, 64 in lieu of ASBC's 66. Further details of ASBC's and NIU's are shown and described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,538,659 and 7,319,386 and in U.S. Patent Application Publication Nos. 2009/0217080 A1, 2009/0212925 A1 and 2009/0212926 A1, each of which is hereby expressly incorporated by reference herein. Further details of WIU's are shown and described in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2007/0210917 A1 which is hereby expressly incorporated by reference herein.


Each of audio stations 62, 64 includes a code blue call lever 63 which is pulled by a caregiver in an emergency such as when a patient in the room is having a heart attack. Call switches 58, smoke alarm 61, and audio stations 62, 64 are each communicatively coupled to a respective input/output (I/O) circuit board 68 as shown diagrammatically in FIG. 1. Circuit boards 68 are sometimes referred to herein as I/O board or I/O circuitry. Each I/O board 68 includes a processor, such as a microprocessor, microcontroller, etc., that receives various alerts and calls, sometimes referred to herein as “alert messages,” from beds 54, pillow speaker units 60, smoke alarms 61, and audio stations 62, 64 in response to the code blue lever 63 being pulled. The processor of I/O circuitry 68 determines an alert message priority designation for each of the incoming alert messages. For example, in the illustrative embodiment, alert messages are designated as either Normal alert messages or High Priority alert messages. However, in other embodiments, more than two alert message priority designations may be used.


The I/O board 68 and therefore, the processor of I/O board 68, is located at the respective patient room. Thus, the alert message priority designation is made at each patient room for the alert messages being communicated to the I/O board 68. As such, a central server is not needed for determining message priority for the messages received by I/O board 68. The I/O board 68 forwards each alert message and its respective priority designation to the remainder of system 50.


Each I/O board 68 is coupled to a respective dome light 70 which really includes multiple lights that are illuminated to indicate room status. The illumination of the various lights of dome light 70 is controlled by the I/O board 68 based on alert conditions occurring in the respective patient room and based on caregiver presence in, or absence from, the respective patient room. Dome lights 70 are mounted outside each of the patient rooms, typically near a doorway to the respective room. In some embodiments, I/O boards 68 are situated in a housing to which the dome lights 70 are mounted. Thus, the I/O boards 68 are located outside the patient rooms adjacent the dome lights 70 in such embodiments. In other embodiments, I/O boards 68 are located inside the patient rooms. In either case, the I/O boards are considered to be “at” the patient room according to this disclosure.


In the illustrative example, a locating badge 72 is shown in wireless communication with a remote locator receiver (RLR) 74 which, in turn, is communicatively coupled with the respective patient room in which the RLR 74 is located. It should be appreciated that system 50 includes a multitude of badges 72 that are worn by respective caregivers and a multitude of RLR's 74 located throughout the respective healthcare facility, including being located in the various patient rooms. In response to an RLR 74 detecting one or more badges 72 in any particular room, a signal or message is communicated to the respective I/O board 68 and the lighting of the associated dome light 70 is updated accordingly. In the illustrative example, badges 72 transmit infrared (IR) signals to RLR's 74 but alternative embodiments in which radio frequency (RF) transmissions, including ultra-wideband (UWB) transmissions, are made by badges 72 and/or RLR's 74 are within the scope of this disclosure.


Still referring to the diagrammatic example of FIG. 1, each I/O board 68 is communicatively coupled to a Power over Ethernet (PoE) switch 76 which is, in turn, communicatively coupled to a primary staff console 78 (sometimes referred to as a “master nurse station”), a secondary staff console 80, and a staff terminal 82. PoE switch 76 is communicatively coupled to a voice over Internet protocol (VoW) Switch and Enterprise server 84 which is, in turn, coupled to a nurse call server 86 via Ethernet infrastructure, illustrated diagrammatically as network 90 in FIG. 1. It should be appreciated that devices 58, 60, 62, 64, 66, 68, 70, 76, 78, 70, 82, 84, 86 are illustrative of a diagrammatic nurse call system portion of the overall system 50 and that nurse call system architecture will vary from one healthcare facility to the next. Other examples of nurse call system architecture and the various types of equipment included in various embodiments of a nurse call system (as well as network 50, in general) can be found in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,746,218; 7,538,659; 7,319,386; 7,242,308; 6,897,780; 6,362,725; 6,147,592; 5,838,223; 5,699,038 and 5,561,412 and in U.S. Patent Application Publication Nos. 2009/0217080; 2009/0214009; 2009/0212956; and 2009/0212925, each of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety for all that it teaches to the extent not inconsistent with the present disclosure which shall control as to any inconsistencies.


In the illustrative example, patient tablets 56 are also included as part of the nurse call system portion of overall system 50. Tablets 56 are used by patients to send specific patient requests such as requests for pain medication, requests for bathroom assistance, food requests, drink requests, ice chips requests, requests for assistance with personal care, etc. For additional details of the functionality of tablets 56 see FIGS. 2-5 and the related discussion found in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2016/0055299 which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety for all that it teaches to the extent not inconsistent with the present disclosure which shall control as to any inconsistencies. In the illustrative example, tablets 56 communicate wirelessly with wireless access points (WAP's) 84 which, in turn, communicate with a patient tablet communications server 92. Server 92 communicates the patient requests, which are also considered to be alert messages according to this disclosure, to nurse call server 86 via network infrastructure 90.


In connection with alert messages originating from beds 54, these include alert messages relating to one or more of the following: bed exit of the patient from the respective bed 54, patient position on the respective bed 54 exceeding a threshold, patient movement on the respective bed 54 exceeding a threshold or falling below a threshold, siderail position (e.g., siderail down) of the respective bed 54, casters of the respective bed 54 not being braked, angle of a head section of the respective bed 54 being below a threshold angle (e.g., 30 degrees), an upper frame of the respective bed 54 not being in its lowest position relative to a base frame of the respective bed 54, a bed component exceeding a threshold temperature, a mattress bladder of the respective bed 54 falling below a threshold pressure, a pneumatic system error or failure of the respective bed 54, an actuator error or failure of the respective bed 54, an overcurrent condition of a component of the respective bed 54, a power system error or failure of the respective bed 54, and power is disconnected from the respective bed 54.


Still referring to FIG. 1, system 50 includes an electronic medical records (EMR) server 94 and an admission/discharge/transfer (ADT) server 96. System 50 includes various other servers 98 as well. Other servers 98 includes, for example, a real time locating system (RTLS) server that is communicatively coupled to receivers 74. In such embodiments, receivers 74 are not communicatively coupled to I/O boards 68. The badges 72, receivers 74, and RTLS server form a real time locating system portion of overall system 50. Staff locating information is communicated from the RTLS server 98 to nurse call server 86 via network 90 in such embodiments.


In some embodiments, another of the other servers 98 is a server that manages the routing of alert messages and related staff information to the various mobile devices 52. In general, alert messages relating to particular patients or particular rooms assigned to particular caregivers are sent to the mobile device 52 of that particular caregiver. The alert messages may originate from beds 54, pillow speaker units 60, and patient tablets 56 in the illustrative example. However, it is contemplated by this disclosure that alert messages originating from other types of equipment may be communicated to the mobile devices 52 of assigned caregivers as well.


In some embodiments, the mobile caregiver application is available to each caregiver from an Application (“App”) Store 99 which is accessible via the Internet as indicated by the dashed double headed arrow in FIG. 1. In other embodiments, the mobile caregiver application is provided to caregivers internally by a systems administrator of system 50. Thus, in some embodiments the mobile caregiver application is stored in one or more of servers 86, 92, 94, 96, 98 and is uploaded to the mobile devices 52 of caregivers or downloaded by the caregivers to their respective mobile devices 52.


The features and functions of the mobile caregiver application are described below in connection with FIGS. 2-46 which comprise screen shots that appear on the user interface screens or display screens of mobile devices 52. By seeing the functionality represented in each of the screen shots and by considering the following description of the screen shots of FIGS. 2-46, those skilled in the art will be enabled to make and use the mobile caregiver application, and its variant embodiments, contemplated herein. It should be appreciated that the screen shots of this disclosure are exemplary in nature and are provided to give a general sense of the type of information that may appear on the display screen of any given mobile device 52 during use of the contemplated mobile caregiver application. Thus, the screen shots are merely individual examples from a practically unlimited number of possibilities. That is, the information such as alert messages, staff names, staff locations, room name formats, unit names, etc. is dynamic and varies from healthcare facility to healthcare facility and, in fact, varies in any given healthcare facility throughout any given day in response to the various incoming alert messages, for example.


Referring now to FIG. 2, a Staff Detail screen 100 includes a list of accepted alerts 102 and escalated alerts 104 of an individual caregiver. A main menu 106 is provided at the bottom of screen 100 and includes a Patients icon 108, a Staff icon 110, a Messages icon 112, and a Me icon 114. The Staff Detail screen 100 is shown on the respective mobile device 52 in response to the Me icon 114 being selected on the main menu 106. Icons are sometimes referred to as buttons herein. Thus, these terms are used interchangeably. Icons or buttons are considered to be selected or selectable, herein, in that a user touches or taps the icon on the display screen of the respective mobile device 52 to navigate to additional functionality of the mobile caregiver application associated with the respective icon or button.


In the upper section of screen 100 of FIG. 2, the caregiver's name, location and employee identification (ID) number is shown. In the illustrative example, the employee's name is Dave Brubeck who is located in room 2156 and is available for answering voice calls, phone messages, and alerts. A circle 115 is provided to the right of the text “Available in 2156” which appears in a text box. The circle 115 is color coded green if the caregiver is available and is color coded red if the caregiver is not available. The accepted alerts 102 of illustrative screen 100 includes a Fall alert, a Bathroom alert, and a Room Service alert. The Fall alert is designated as a High Priority alert and was generated three minutes ago in room 2156A by a patient named Charlie Hunter. The Bathroom alert is designated as a Normal Priority alert and was generated twelve minutes ago in room 2162 by a patient named Henry Rollins. The Room Service alert is designated as a Normal Priority alert and was generated two hours ago in room 2160A. No patient is assigned to room 2160A in the given example.


The Fall alert of the accepted alerts 102 is based on bed status information from the bed 54 in room 2156A assigned to Charlie Hunter. For example, a Falls Protocol, when enabled, may require that a patient remain in the bed 54 as monitored by a bed exit/patient position monitoring system of the bed 54, that certain siderails of the bed 54 be in their raised positions, that the casters of bed 54 be braked, and that the upper frame of the bed 54 be in its lowest position relative to the base frame of the bed 54. If any of those Falls Protocol conditions are violated as detected by nurse call server 86, then a Fall alert is considered to exist and an appropriate message is sent via the appropriate portions of system 50 (network 90 and server 84 in the illustrative example) to the mobile device 52 of the caregiver assigned to the patient of the particular bed 54. In the illustrative embodiment, the Fall alert does not specify which particular bed condition of the Falls Protocol is violated. In other embodiments, the particular bed condition may be specified on screen 100 such as indicating siderail down, patient exiting the bed, or brake not set, for example, in lieu of or in addition to the text Fall.


The Bathroom alert of the accepted alerts 102 is based on an input from the patient in room 2162 using the respective patient tablet 56. The Room Service alert of the accepted alerts 102 is generated by another staff member in some embodiments. For example, a staff member may use their mobile device 52 to generate the Room Service alert or may use the room station 64 in the room to be serviced which is room 2160A in the given example. In other embodiments, the ADT system of which server 96 is a part may generate the Room Service alert in response to the patient previously assigned to the room being discharged from the healthcare facility. Thus, this disclosure contemplates that alert messages may also be generated by other staff members and other portions of system 50.


The Juice alert of the escalated alerts 104 is based on an input from the patient in room 2156A using the respective patient tablet 56. However, the primary caregiver, who is a caregiver other than Dave Brubeck in the given example, was not able to respond to this particular alert message and so the alert was escalated from that other caregiver to Dave Brubeck for possible response. Dave Brubeck is sometimes referred to as a secondary caregiver in this scenario. The secondary caregiver is the caregiver designated for escalation of any alerts to which a primary caregiver is unable to respond. It is contemplated by this disclosure that escalation of alerts may occur in various ways such as after a preset period of time has elapsed without acceptance by the primary caregiver and/or if the primary caregiver has a status of unavailable and/or if the primary caregiver uses their mobile device 52 to manually escalate an alert to a secondary caregiver. A “swipe left to accept” icon 116 is provided on screen 100 and is used by the caregiver to accept any incoming escalated alerts by swiping left on the icon 116 or by swiping left on the escalated alert information. In the illustrative example, another alert is originating from room 2162 of patient Henry Rollins and can be accepted by the caregiver by selecting the Accept button 118.


Referring now to FIG. 3, a Staff Detail screen 120 has a list 122 of staff assigned to nursing unit four (NU4) in the given example because NU4 is the unit to which caregiver Dave Brubeck is assigned. Screen 120 is shown on the respective mobile device 52 in response to the Staff icon 110 being selected on the main menu 106. List 122 has staff members of the caregiver's unit arranged in alphabetical order from top to bottom. Letters of the alphabet are provided to the right of list 112 with each letter serving as a selectable button to navigate to other portions of the list 122 which are not able to be seen on screen 120 in FIG. 3.


Beneath each staff member's name on list 122 is the staff member's role or title (e.g., CRNA, Unit Secretary, OB Tech, RN, just to give a few). If the caregivers appearing on list 122 are wearing badges 72 and are detected by receivers 74 in a particular room or other location, such location information is shown to the right of the staff member's name on list 122. Also to the right of each caregiver's name on list 122 is a corresponding circle 115 that is color coded green or red, as discussed above, depending upon whether the particular staff member is available or unavailable, respectively. The darker circle 115 next to Ivie Anderson's name indicates a red circle and the other circles 115 in FIG. 3 are color coded green. Finally, star indicia 124 is provided to the right of any staff members on list 122 who have been designated as “favorites” by the caregiver of the associated mobile device 52.


Screen 120 includes a search field or box 126 in which a staff member's name can be typed to search for that particular caregiver. By tapping in box 126, a keyboard appears on screen 120 and is used to type the desired name, or portion thereof, to be searched. Above search box 126 is a “Back to 4 South” button 128 that is selectable to navigate back to a list of staff members assigned to 4 South. For example, NU4 may be a subset of all of the units assigned to 4 South such other nursing units of 4 South may include NU1, NU2, NU3, NU4, etc. Screen 120 further includes a Unit icon 130 and a Filter icon 132. Selection of Unit icon 130 by the caregiver on screen 120 results in a menu being shown of all units of the associated healthcare facility that the caregiver can select to obtain a list, similar to list 122, of staff members assigned to the selected Unit. Selection of Filter icon 132 by the caregiver on screen 120 results in a menu being shown having an Availability filter and a Staff Title filter being shown as will be described below in connection with FIGS. 4 and 5.


Referring now to FIG. 4, a first Filter screen 134 has an Availability filter expanded in response to selection of an Availability menu option icon 136 to show a menu of availability filter options icons that can be selected by the caregiver. The Availability filter options include an All icon 138, Available icon 140, a Busy icon 142, and an Unavailable icon 144. In the illustrative example of FIG. 4, the All icon 138 has been selected resulting in check marks 146 being shown in each button 138, 140, 142, 144. In some embodiments, a caregiver or staff member availability status of busy results in the respective circle 115 for that caregiver being color coded yellow. Assuming All icon 138 is not selected, then individual icons 140, 142, 144 can be selected or not selected at the option of the caregiver. Subsequent touches or taps of icons 138, 140, 142, 144 toggle the associated filter between active (e.g., on) and inactive (e.g., off) states.


If the All icon is selected on screen 134, then list 122 of screen 120 of FIG. 3 will show all staff members of a selected unit regardless of their availability status. If only Available icon 140 is selected on screen 134, then only available staff members will appear in list 122 of screen 120. If only Busy icon 142 is selected on screen 134, then only busy staff members will appear in list 122 of screen 120. If Unavailable icon 144 is selected on screen 134, then only unavailable staff members will appear in list 122 of screen 120. If combinations of two icons 140, 142, 144 are selected on screen 134, then the staff members having the availability status corresponding to the two selected icons 140, 142, 144 will appear in list 122 of screen 120.


An up arrow indicia 148 is provided in the Availability menu option icon 136 to indicate that a subsequent tap of icon 136 will collapse the menu of availability filter options. Thus, selection of icon 136 when indicia 148 is present results in icons 138, 140, 142, 144 disappearing from screen 134 and then up arrow indicia 148 is replaced in icon 136 with a down arrow indicia similar to a down arrow indicia 150 shown in a Staff Title menu option icon 152. Down arrow indicia 150 indicates that icon 152 is selectable to expand the associated menu options of icon 152 (or icon 136 when down arrow 150 appears in icon 136). A Cancel button 154 is provided at the top left side of screen 134 and is selected if the caregiver does not wish to implement the filter selections that have been made on screen 134. An Apply button 156 is provided at the top right side of screen 134 and is selected if the caregiver wishes to proceed with applying or implementing the filter selections that have been made on screen 134.


Referring now to FIG. 5, a second Filter screen 158 has a Staff Title filter expanded in response to selection of the Staff Title menu option icon 152 to show a menu of staff title filter option icons that can selected by the caregiver. Basically, each staff title filter option icon relates to a particular staff title and due to the large number of such icons in FIG. 5, these icons have not been identified with reference numerals but instead, the staff filtered by selection of each icon of screen 158 is indicated by its associated staff name. In the illustrative example, the staff filter icons are named, from top to bottom, All, ANEST, Clergy, CMA, CN, CAN, HN, HUC, LPN, MD, MGR, NA, None, OB Tech, PCA, RN, Vol, Unit Sec and CRNA. These acronyms are generally known in the healthcare field. Other healthcare facilities may have staff titles that are different than those shown in connection with screen 158 of FIG. 5. Also, the menu of staff title menu option icons shown in FIG. 5 is larger than can be seen on the user interface screen of the associated mobile device. Thus, the caregiver will scroll up or down on the mobile device display to see these various menu options. Selection and deselection of the menu option icons, with check marks 146 appearing for selected options, is done in the same manner as described above in connection with FIG. 4. The same goes for the functionality of buttons 154, 156. Thus, the descriptions do not need to be repeated.


Referring now to FIG. 6, a My Team screen 160 is shown and is an alternative screen that appears on a display screen of a mobile device 52 in response to Staff icon 110 of main menu 106 being selected. Screen 160 is similar to screen 120 of FIG. 4 and so only pertinent differences will be noted, otherwise like reference numbers are used to denote like features and the descriptions will not be repeated. Screen 160 includes a My Team icon 162 and an adjacent My Unit icon 164. Icons 162, 164 are located above search field 126 in the illustrative example. The My Team icon 162 is highlighted to indicate that a list 122′ of staff members on screen 160 is the caregiver's team. In the illustrative embodiment, each staff member on the caregiver's team is automatically designated by the caregiver mobile application as being one of the caregiver's “favorites” as indicated by the respective star 124 appearing to the right of each team member's name. Selection of My Unit icon 164 results in screen 160 showing the list of staff members in the caregiver's unit in basically the same manner as shown in list 122 of screen 120 of FIG. 3. In some embodiments, main menu 106 is included at the bottom of screen 160.


Referring now to FIG. 7, a Staff Detail screen 166 appears on the display screen of the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to a staff member name being selected on screen 120 of FIG. 3 or screen 160 of FIG. 6. A top section of Staff Detail screen 166 includes information about the selected staff member. In the illustrative example, Louis Armstrong is the selected caregiver's name. The selected caregiver is located in room 2188 and is available. The selected caregiver is an OB Tech of nursing unit NU3 and has a mobile device extension of 5555. A bottom section of Staff Detail screen 166 shows a list 168 of patients assigned to the selected staff member. For each line on list 168, a patient name is provided, the patient's assigned room is provided to the left of the patient's name, and a right arrow 169 is provided to the right of the patient's name. Each right arrow 169 is selectable to navigate to additional information about the respective patient.


Above the list 168 of assigned patients on screen 166 is a set of communication icons that are selectable to communicate with the selected staff member or, in one instance other caregivers, via different communication methods. In the illustrative example, the communication icons include a Device icon 170, a Video icon 172, a Messages icon 174, and a Mobile icon 176. Device icon 170 is selected to place a call directly to the mobile device 52 of the selected caregiver (e.g., Louis Armstrong in the given example). Video icon 172 is selected to record a video message to be sent to the selected caregiver. Messages icon 174 is selected to send a text message to the selected caregiver. Selection of Mobile icon 176 results in a telephone keypad being shown on the caregiver's mobile device 52 for dialing any desired phone number.


Referring now to FIG. 8, an alternative Staff Detail screen 180 appears on the display screen of the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to Me icon 114 of main menu 106 being selected. Screen 180 is an alternative to screen 100 of FIG. 2. The upper section of screen 180 of FIG. 8 is substantially the same as the upper section of screen 100 of FIG. 2 in that it includes the caregiver's name, location and employee identification (ID) number. In the illustrative example of FIG. 8, the employee's name is Darren Hudgins who is located in room 4116 and is available for answering voice calls, phone messages, and alerts as indicated by circle 115 being color coded green. Screen 180 includes a list of open alerts 182 and a list of accepted alerts 184 beneath the upper section.


In the illustrative example, there is one open alert 182 which states “Rounding due for this room” in connection with Room 1-B to which patient Jerry Judy is assigned. The illustrative open alert is designated as a Normal Priority alert and originated about one hour ago. A “swipe left for options” icon 186 is shown to the right of the text “1 OPEN ALERT” and is used by the caregiver to pull up an options menu by swiping left on the icon 186 or by swiping left on the open alert 182 itself. The options menu provides the caregiver with buttons for accepting the open alert or escalating the open alert to another caregiver. In some embodiments, the options menu associated with icon 186 also includes a button for accepting the alert and calling the patient room (see the discussion below of FIG. 16 regarding the “Accept & Call” option). The rounding alert message is originated from one or more of servers 86, 94, 98 according to this disclosure.


Still referring to FIG. 8, a heading at the top of the accepted calls 184 indicates that there are eight accepted alerts. However, only four of them can be seen on screen 180. Thus, the caregiver will need to scroll up or down on the display screen of the mobile device 52 to see the other accepted calls. The accepted calls that can be seen in FIG. 8 include calls indicating the following: “Patient is requesting pain medication,” “Normal,” “Patient is requesting ice chips,” and “Hunger Request.” All of these alert messages except for “Normal” originate in response to inputs by the patient, in this example Jerry Judy of room 1-B, on the respective patient tablet 56. The alert messages originated by the patient using tablet 56 are self-explanatory in this example. The “Normal” alert message may be initiated by the patient pressing a generic nurse call button provided on a siderail of the respective bed 54 or on the respective handheld pillow speaker unit 60, for example.


Referring now to FIG. 9, a My Unit screen 188 appears on the display screen of the caregiver's mobile device 52 in some embodiments in response to Staff icon 110 of main menu 106 being selected. Screen 188 is another alternative to screen 120 of FIG. 3 and screen 160 of FIG. 6. Thus, like reference numbers are used to indicate aspects of screen 188 that are the same or substantially similar to those of screens 120, 160. Thus, like screen 120 of FIG. 3, screen 188 of FIG. 9 shows a list of staff assigned to the same unit as the caregiver. The primary difference between screen 188 of FIG. 9 and screens 120, 160 is the inclusion of a Favorites icon 189 which is selectable to have a list of staff members that the caregiver and/or the mobile caregiver application has designated as “favorites” displayed on the display screen of the respective mobile device 52.


Referring now to FIG. 10, which is similar to FIG. 7, an alternative Staff Detail screen 190 appears on the display screen of the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to a staff member being selected on the My Unit screen 188 of FIG. 9. In the illustrative example, Julia-Louise van Hoosen is the staff member that was selected on screen 188 of FIG. 9 after the caregiver scrolled down to her name. Like screen 166 of FIG. 7, the alternative Staff Detail screen 190 of FIG. 10 shows a list 168 of patients assigned to the selected staff member and the set of communication icons 170, 172, 174 (icon 176 is omitted from the screen 190) that are selectable to communicate with the selected staff member via different communication methods as described above. Screen 190 also has a text string stating “TSACampus<Joint & Spine<Joint & Spine Center 3” which indicates further information about the unit to with the selected caregiver is assigned. In response to Device icon 170 being selected on screen 190 of FIG. 10, a voice call is placed directly to the mobile device 52 of the selected caregiver as shown by the Call screen 192 of FIG. 11. This voice call is a secure voice call and involves only equipment included in system 50 such as VoIP switch and Enterprise server 84. The voice call from the caregiver to the selected caregiver is not routed through any equipment included in public infrastructure outside of system 50 of the healthcare facility. This is in contrast to any calls placed using the phone keypad associated with Mobile icon 176 of screen 166 of FIG. 7 which places a regular phone call over the public telephone infrastructure that is external to system 50.


Referring now to FIG. 12, a My Patients List screen 194 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to the Patients icon 108 being selected on main menu 106. Screen 194 includes a list 196 of patients assigned to the caregiver. The room assignment for each patient is shown to the left of the patient's name in each row of list 196 and right arrows 169 are shown to the right of the patient's name in each row to indicate that selection of the row, the icon 169, or the patient's name results in more information about the selected patient being displayed on the display screen of the mobile device 52. Screen 194 includes a My Patients button 198 and an adjacent My Unit button 199 located above list 196. In the illustrative example, button 198 is highlighted to indicate that list 196 includes the name of the patients assigned to the caregiver. In response to selection of button 199 all patients in the caregiver's unit are included in list 196.


Referring now to FIG. 13, a Patient Details screen 200 appears on the display screen of the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to selection of the row, the icon 169, or the patient's name on list 196 of screen 194 of FIG. 12. The upper section of screen 200 includes the patient's name, room assignment, room extension, medical records number (MRN) or other patient identification number, and the patient's unit information. In the illustrative example of FIG. 13, the patient's name is Dorothy Goldenblatt having MRN M1. The patient is assigned to room ICU-1 which has an extension of 4101. The patient's unit information is shown as “TSACampus<Intensive Medicine<ICU.”


Beneath the patient information at the top section of screen 200 is a Room icon 202 that is selectable by the caregiver to place a call to the patient's assigned room. In response to icon 202 of screen 200 being selected, a communications channel is opened within system 50 between the caregiver's mobile device 52 and the respective audio station 62, 64 in the patient's assigned room location. Thus, the extension number of the patient's room refers to the extension number associate with the audio station 62, 64 of the room location to which the patient is assigned. The communications channel includes the equipment of system 50 that is used to route voice packets between the mobile device 52 and the audio station 62, 64. Thus, the equipment involved in such a communication channel includes, for example, VoIP Switch and Enterprise Server 84, PoE switch 76, and I/O Board 68. In response to Room icon 202 being selected on screen 200 of FIG. 13, a Call screen 204 shown in FIG. 14 appears on the display screen of the caregiver's mobile device.


Still referring to FIG. 13, screen 200 includes a list 206 of caregivers that are assigned to the selected patient. In the illustrative example, Darren Hudgins is the primary caregiver assigned to the selected patient and Sebastian is the secondary caregiver assigned to the selected patient. To the right of each of the assigned caregiver's name in list 206 are a phone icon 208, a message icon 210, and the caregiver's mobile device extension number. Selection of icon 208 results in a secure voice call being placed to the mobile phone 52 of the respective caregiver and selection of icon 210 results in a screen appearing on the caregiver's mobile device 52 for sending a text message to the respective caregiver. Illustrative screen 200 includes a Call History window 212 beneath list 206. In the given example, window 212 is blank. However, it should be understood that window 212 becomes populated with the various calls (aka alerts or alert messages) generated in system 50 in connection with the selected patient as they occur during the selected patient's stay in the healthcare facility.


Referring now to FIG. 15, an example of a Home screen 214 of the caregiver's mobile device 52 is provided. Home screen 214 has an icon or tile 216 in the in the lower right corner (but above a main menu bar 218 at the bottom of the screen 214). The presence of tile 216 on screen 214 indicates that the mobile software application described herein has been successfully downloaded (or uploaded) to the caregiver's mobile device 52. In the illustrative example, screen 214 of FIG. 15 has a window 220 which displays information about an incoming alert message at the top of the screen 214. Thus, window 220 appears on the Home screen 214 of the caregiver's mobile device 214 in those instances in which an incoming alert message for the caregiver has been generated within system 50 when the mobile caregiver application has not yet been opened on the mobile device 52 by selection of tile 216. In the illustrative example, window 220 includes text indicating that a Normal alert originated from Room 1-A. A date and time at which the alert message was generated is also shown in window 220.


Referring now to FIG. 16, a Call Details screen 222 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to the incoming alert message shown of window 220 of FIG. 15 being selected by the caregiver. The Call Details screen 222 includes a window 224 having further information about the incoming alert message. For example, the patient's name (Luke Skywalker in the given example) is included in window 224 along with the alert type, alert priority, delivery count and original delivery time. Beneath the alert information, window 224 includes an Accept icon 226, an Accept & Call icon 228, and an Escalate icon 230. In response to selection of icon 226, the caregiver accepts responsibility for responding to the alert message and the alert message of window 224 is added to the list of the caregiver's accepted alerts. In response to selection of icon 228, the caregiver accepts responsibility for responding to the alert message, which is added to the list of the caregiver's accepted alerts, and a voice call is placed to the audio station 62, 64 of the room of the patient from which the alert message originated. In response to selection of icon 230, the alert message is escalated to another caregiver such as the assigned secondary caregiver for the patient.


Referring now to FIG. 17, a Patient Detail screen 232 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to a patient name being selected on the Staff Detail screen 166 of FIG. 7. The Patient Detail screen 232 includes an upper section having information indicating the patient's name, the patient's location, date of birth, MRN, sex, assigned room, and medical risks. In the illustrative example, the patient's name is Charlie Hunter (the first patient on list 168 in FIG. 7) who is indicated as being located “OUT OF ROOM.” Also in the illustrative example, the patient has been indicated as having a Falls Risk, a Pulmonary Risk, and a Skin Risk. The patient also has a BMAT of one and there have been 11 lifts of the patient in the preceding 24 hours for the patient.


Beneath the patient information and medical risk information, screen 232 includes a Get Help icon 234, a Set States icon 236, a Remind Me icon 238, and a Call Patient icon 240. Selection of icon 234 results in a message being sent to the master nurse station 78 to request one or more additional caregivers come to the caregiver's location and provide assistance. Selection of icon 238 results in a screen that permits the caregiver to set up one or more reminders to be displayed on the display screen of the caregiver's mobile device 52 at a selected future time. Selection of icon 240 results in a voice call being placed to the audio station 62, 64 in the patient's assigned room (Room 2156A in the given example of FIG. 17). Selection of icon 236 results in a screen that is discussed below in connection with FIG. 18.


Still referring to FIG. 17, screen 2323 has a bottom section including a Care Team button 242, a Pt. Notes button 244, and a History button 246. In the illustrative example, icon 242 has been selected and is highlighted. In response to selection of icon 242, a Care Team list 248 is shown in the bottom section of screen 232. Care Team list 248 lists the team of caregivers assigned to the patient. Each row in list 248 includes the staff members name, staff title beneath the name, the current location of the caregiver as determined by the RTLS, circle icon 115 with color coding to indicate availability status, message icon 210, and phone icon 208. The descriptions above of icons 115, 208, 210 is equally applicable to FIG. 17 and does not need to be repeated. In the illustrative example, icons 208, 210 for Cardiologist Brielle McKennaugh are greyed out to indicate that voice calls and text messaging are not currently possible for that staff member.


Selection of icon 244 results in a patient notes window appearing in the bottom section of screen 232 for the caregiver to enter patient notes. Selection of icon 246 results in a call history window, similar to window 212 of FIG. 13, appearing in the bottom section of screen 232. The call history window shows the previous calls (e.g., alert message information) for the patient. In the illustrative example, the number “(2)” appears next to “History” within button 246 to indicate there are two previous calls that will appear in the call history window in response to button 246 being selected.


Referring now to FIG. 18, a Set States screen 250 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to the Set States icon 236 being selected on the screen 232 of FIG. 17. The Set States screen 250 includes a menu 252 of states that are selectable for the patient. In the illustrative example of FIG. 18, the following states are shown on menu 252 from top to bottom: Out of Room, Falls Risk, NPO, No Latex, Sleeping, and Procedure in Progress. These states are self-explanatory except for, perhaps, NPO which is an abbreviation for the Latin phrase “nil per os” which means nothing by mouth. Other states of menu 252, such as Pulmonary Risk and Skin Risk, can be viewed by scrolling up or down in the menu 252. Each state includes a radio button 254 that is filled in if the state is selected and that is empty if the state is not selected. In the illustrative example, radio buttons 254 in the Out of Room and Falls Risk rows of menu 252 have been selected and each of the others have not.


Still referring to FIG. 18, in the Out of Room row of menu 252, information is provided to indicate that the Out of Room selection was made 15 minutes ago by Jessica Smith who is a different caregiver than the one viewing menu 252 on their mobile device 52. In the Falls Risk row of menu 252, information is provided to indicate that the Falls Risk selection was made October 2, at 10:01 am by EMR Integration (e.g., the EMR system portion of overall system 50 including EMR server 94). Thus, it is contemplated by this disclosure patient states may be selected using various equipment of system 50 other than each individual caregiver's mobile device 52. It is also contemplated by this disclosure that each caregiver can select and de-select patient states on menu 252 using their individual mobile devices. Subsequent taps of the state names in each row of menu 252 or respective radio buttons 254 or graphical icons at the right of each row in menu 252 result in selection and de-selection of the respective patient states.


Referring now to FIG. 19, a Staff Member Detail screen 256 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to selection of a staff member's name on any screen having a list of staff members such as the screens 120, 160, 188 of FIGS. 3, 6 and 9, respectively. The top section of screen 256 includes information about the selected caregiver such as the selected caregiver's name, location, availability status, mobile device 52 extension, and employee ID. A Change icon 257 is also provided in the top section of screen 257 for selection by the caregiver to return back to the previous screen having a list of staff members from which to select. Beneath the selected caregiver information, the Staff Member Detail screen 256 has an Active Calls button 258 and a Favorites button 260. In the give example, button 258 is selected resulting in a list 262 of active calls for the selected staff member appearing on the display screen of the caregiver's mobile device 52.


In the illustrative example of FIG. 19, the first row of list 262 represents a new or incoming call. In particular, the call is a Fall alert message that originated three minutes ago and that has high priority. In connection with the incoming call on screen 256, Accept button 226 and Accept & Call button 228 are provided. The description above buttons 226, 228 in connection with FIG. 16 is equally applicable to these same buttons on screen 256 of FIG. 19. To the left of button 228 on screen 256 is a Re-Route button 264. Button 264 is similar to Escalate button 230 but instead of escalating to the secondary caregiver, selection of Re-Route button 264 allows the caregiver to designate a particular caregiver, such as one who has not been designated as the secondary caregiver, to which the call is to be re-routed. At the bottom of list 262 is a call that has been re-routed to the caregiver by D. Whitman.


Referring now to FIG. 20, a Favorites screen 266 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to the Favorites icon 260 being selected on the Staff Member Detail screen 256 of FIG. 19. The Favorites screen 266 includes a list 268 of favorite contacts for the selected caregiver. The features and functions of icons 115, 208, 210 appearing on screen 266 are the same as previously described herein. Screen 266 includes a Reorder button 270 and a Delete button 272. Selection of button 270 results in various options for reordering the staff names on list 268 being presented on the display screen of the caregiver's mobile device 52. For example, the names may be sorted by unit, staff title, alphabetically, availability, and so forth. Selection of button 272 permits the caregiver to select names on the list 268 for deletion from the list 268. Screen 266 also has a “+” icon 274 (aka an Add icon 274) which can be selected to add new staff members to the list 268.


Referring now to FIG. 21, an Add Favorites screen 276 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to the Add icon 274 being selected on the Favorites screen 266 of FIG. 20. The Add Favorites screen 276 including a window 278 having a first button 280 which is selected if the caregiver wishes to add a favorite by typing a phone number and having a second button 282 which is selected if the caregiver wishes to add a favorite by picking a staff or location. A Cancel button 284 is provided on screen 276 beneath the window 278 and is selected by the caregiver if the caregiver no longer wishes to add a favorite to list 268 of screen 266.


Referring now to FIG. 22, a New Favorites screen 286 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to the Type a Phone Number icon 280 being selected on the Add Favorites screen 276 of FIG. 21. The New Favorites screen 286 includes first and second fields 288, 290 for typing a Name and Phone Number, respectively, of the staff member to be added as a new favorite. An Add icon 292 is provided at the top right of screen 286 and is selected by the caregiver to add the staff member designated in fields 288, 290 to the list 268 of favorites. Cancel button 284 is provided at the top left of screen 286 and is selected by the caregiver if the if the caregiver no longer wishes to add a favorite to list 268.


Referring now to FIG. 23, a first Change Availability screen 294 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to selection of a down arrow icon 296 that appears on the screens 100, 180 of FIGS. 2 and 8, respectively. The first Change Availability screen 294 permits the caregiver to select a Do Not Disturb time interval 298 during which no new incoming alerts will be received and during which the caregiver will be designated as unavailable. In the illustrative example, the time interval 298 can be selected by scrolling in 5 minute increments up to 15 minutes at which point the increments increase by 15 minutes each. A “Begin Do Not Disturb” button 300 is provided on screen 294 and is selected by the caregiver to activate or initiate the Do Not Disturb time interval. The Change availability screen 294 also has a Sign Out icon 302 that is selected by the caregiver to sign out at the end of their shift. After sign out, the caregiver is no longer available to receive alert messages occurring within system 50. A Close icon 304 is provided on screen 294 and is selected by the caregiver to close out of screen 294 and return to the previous screen.


Referring now to FIG. 24, a second Change Availability screen 306 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to selection of the down arrow icon 294 on the screens 100, 180 of FIGS. 2 and 8, respectively, if a Do Not Disturb time interval 298 has been previously set and is active. The second Change Availability screen 306 has an “End Do Not Disturb” icon 308 that is selected by the caregiver to end the Do Not Disturb time interval 298. Icons 302, 304 appearing on screen 306 have been described previously and the same description applies.


Referring now to FIG. 25, a Messages screen 310 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to selection of the Messages icon 112 of the main menu 106. The Message screen 310 has a list 312 of message strings in which the caregiver has been involved in the past. Some message strings are group messages sent or received to multiple caregivers and some are individual messages sent to individual caregivers. The time of the most recent message in the string is indicated at the right side of each row in list 312. Screen 312 has a New Voice Message icon 314 that the caregiver selects to send a voice message to one or more selected caregivers. Screen 312 also has a New Message icon 316 that the caregiver selects to send a text message to one or more selected caregivers.


Referring now to FIG. 26, a New Message screen 318 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to icon 316 being selected on the Messages screen 310 of FIG. 25. The New Message screen has a “Tap here to search your unit” icon 320 in the To field. Screen 318 also has “+” icons 322 (aka Add icons 322) at the right side of each of the To fields and About fields. A Cancel icon 323 is provided on screen 318 and is selected by the caregiver to return to the previous screen.


Referring now to FIG. 27, a first Search Results screen 324 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 after selection of the Add icon 322 in the To field of FIG. 26 and after the search string “Arm” has been entered into the To field as a search string or search criteria. The first Search Results screen 324 lists two caregivers that met the search criteria and also has a keyboard 326 at the bottom of the screen 324 for typing a message.


Referring now to FIG. 28, a My Team screen 328, similar to screen 160 of FIG. 6, appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to selection of the “Tap here to search your unit” icon 320 on screen 318 of FIG. 26. Icons 115, 126, 162, 164, 323 of screen 328 have been described above and the same description is applicable to screen 328. In the illustrative example of FIG. 28, icon 162 is highlighted and so the My Team screen 328 has a list 122″ of the caregiver's team members to whom messages can be sent. Selection of icon 164 results in a list of staff members in the caregiver's unit being displayed in list 122″ rather than the team members. Selection of staff members names on list 122″ results in the names being added to the To field of screen 318 of FIG. 26.


Referring now to FIG. 29, a second Search Results screen 330 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 after selection of the Add icon in the About field of FIG. 26 and after the search string “Mon” has been entered into About field as a search criteria. The second Search Results screen 330 lists one patient that met the search criteria and has the keyboard at the bottom of the screen 330 for typing a message. In FIG. 29, a “searching within your unit—tap the +for more” message 332 appears beneath the About field.


Referring now to FIG. 30, a My Patients screen 334 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to selection of a Add icon 322 on the screen 330 of FIG. 29 in the About field. Icons 198, 199, 323 of screen 334 have been described above and the same description is applicable to screen 334. Icon 126′ is similar to icons 126 of FIGS. 3, 6, 9 and 28 except that patients are searched in connection with icon 126′ rather than staff members. In the illustrative example of FIG. 30, icon 198 is highlighted and so the My Patients screen 334 has a list of the patients assigned to the caregiver to whom messages can be sent. Selection of icon 199 on screen 334 results in a list of patients from the caregiver's unit being displayed rather than just the patients assigned to the caregiver.


Referring now to FIG. 31, a Sent Message screen 336 shows an example of a message 338 that has been sent by the caregiver using the caregiver's mobile device 52. A back arrow 339 appears at the top left of screen 336 and is selected by the caregiver to return back to screen 310 of FIG. 25 or to some other default screen. Referring to FIG. 32, a Message String screen 340 shows an example of a message string 342 between the caregiver and two other caregivers. The two other caregivers are Louis Armstrong and Hayes Alvis in the given example.


Referring now to FIG. 33, a Conversation Details screen 344 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to an information (“i”) icon 346 being selected on the screen 340 of FIG. 32. Screen 344 has a field 348 showing the subject of the conversation (Charlie Hunter of room 2156A in the given example) and showing a list 350 of participants to the message string 342 of FIG. 32. Icon 339 also appears on screen 344 and is selectable to return back to the screen 340 of FIG. 32.


Referring now to FIG. 34, a Care Team screen 352, similar to screen 232 of FIG. 17, appears on a caregiver's phone 52 for a caregiver (Janice Masterson in the given example) who does not have administrative rights to set states for the respective patient. The same reference numbers are used in FIG. 34 for those portions of screen 352 that are the same as or substantially similar to like portions of screen 232 of FIG. 17 and the descriptions above are equally applicable. In FIG. 34, icons 234, 236, 238 are omitted because these functions are not available to particular staff member. Also, a You indicia 354 appears in list 248 next to the caregiver's name.


Referring now to FIG. 35, a Patient Notes screen 356 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to selection of the Pt. Notes icon 244 on the screen 352 of FIG. 34. The Patient Notes screen 356 has a window 358 in the bottom section beneath icons 242, 244, 246 that contains notes that have been entered by one or more caregivers about the patient using their mobile devices 52 or other equipment (e.g., nurse call computers, EMR computers, ADT computers) of system 50.


Referring now to FIG. 36, a History screen 360 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to selection of the History icon 246 on screen 352 of FIG. 34 or screen 356 of FIG. 35. The History screen 360 has a history window 362 in the bottom section beneath icons 242, 244, 246 that contains a list of the patient's nurse calls including currently open nurse calls and older nurse calls that have been previously completed by caregivers.


Referring now to FIG. 37, an alternative My Unit screen 364, similar to FIG. 9, is shown with list 122 displaying a portion of staff assigned to the same unit as the caregiver. Scrolling is needed on screen 364 to see other staff of the unit. The same reference numbers are used in FIG. 37 as were used in FIG. 9 and the descriptions above are equally applicable. Screen 364 includes an Other Units icon 366 which is selectable by the caregiver to navigate to staff lists for other units of the healthcare facility. For example, FIG. 38 shows an Other Units screen 368 that appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to selection of the Other Units icon 366 of screen 364 of FIG. 37. The Other Units screen 368 has a list 370 of other units of first and second hospital campuses (Crescent Green Memorial East and Crescent Green Memorial West in the given example). Screen 368 also includes the You indicia 354 to indicate the units to which the caregiver belongs.


Referring now to FIG. 39, a Non-Home Results screen 372 that appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to selection of a unit from a hospital campus different than the caregiver's campus on the Other Units screen 368 of FIG. 38. Screen 372 includes a “Go back to 4 West” button 374 that is selected by the caregiver to return to screen 364 of FIG. 37. FIG. 40 shows a Tapped Search screen 376 that appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to selection of the “Tap to search” icon 126 at the top of the screens 364, 372 of FIG. 37 or FIG. 39, respectively. The Tapped Search screen 376 has a list or menu 378 of different types of staff searches that can be undertaken by the caregiver. The choices in menu 378 are self-explanatory in FIG. 40. Screen 376 also has a “What are you looking for?” field 380 in which search strings are enterable by the caregiver. A Done icon 382 is also provided at the top of screen 376 for selection by the caregiver to close out of screen 376.


Referring now to FIG. 41, a first Search Results page 384 appears on the caregiver's mobile device in response to a search string “Carol” being entered in the “What are you looking for?” field 380 at the top of the Tapped Search screen 376 of FIG. 40. The search results of screen 384 include three staff members, no units, and no favorites. FIG. 42 shows a second Search Results page 386 that appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to a search string “Onc” being entered in the “What are you looking for?” field 380 at the top of the Tapped Search screen 376 of FIG. 40. The search results of screen 386 include one staff member, two units, and no favorites. FIG. 43 shows a third Search Results page 388 that appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to a search string “4” being entered in the “What are you looking for?” field 380 at the top of the Tapped Search screen 376 of FIG. 40. The search results of screen 388 include one unit, 48 locations, one favorite, and no staff. FIG. 44 shows a fourth Search Results page 390 that appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to a search string “XYZ” being entered in the “What are you looking for?” field 380 at the top of the Tapped Search screen 376 of FIG. 40. There were no matches for the search string “XYZ” as indicated on screen 390.


Referring now to FIG. 45, a screen shot of a Dial Pad screen 392 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to selection of the Mobile icon 176 of FIG. 7 and, in some embodiments, in response to selection of the phone icon 208 such as those shown in FIGS. 13, 17, 20, 34 and 43, for example, if an extension to another mobile device 52 or to one of audio stations 62, 64, as the case may be, is nonexistent or otherwise not available for the associated staff member or patient. Dial Pad screen 392 has a telephone dial pad that is used to place a call to a phone number as is well-known.


Screen 392 includes a Recents icon 394 in the lower left corner of the screen 392. FIG. 46 shows a Recent Phone Calls screen 396 that appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 in response to selection of the Recents icon 394 on the Dial Pad screen 392 of FIG. 45. Two recent phone calls are shown on screen 396 in the illustrative example. Icons 208 are provided in each row of the list of recent calls and are selectable to place a voice call to the respective phone number of the recent call.


The following provides additional information and also summarizes various aspects of the present disclosure:


Patient Details—The patient details screen is divided into two main sections. The top section shows relatively static information about the patient such as date of birth, risks, location, and the ability to call into the patient's room. The bottom section is subdivided into three sections: (1) Care Team—Shows all other caregivers who are assigned to care for this patient. Includes such details as their title (RN, Cardiologist, etc.), their location, and their availability; also includes options to message or call the caregiver if possible; tapping the message button will start a new conversation or look up an existing conversation between you and the selected caregiver with this patient as the subject; (2) Patient Notes—Shows the recorded notes for this patient; and (3) Nurse Call History—Shows a log of recent nurse calls, including the current state, the priority, how long ago it transpired, and who handled it.


Messages Tab—This tab contains everything to do with text messaging. List—The list of all conversations. From here you can also start a new conversation or check voicemail. Start New Conversation—A conversation can contain multiple caregiver participants. It can optionally reference a specific patient or location. New Conversation, Typing Participant—One way to add participants is to start typing a name. Any matching caregivers in your assigned unit(s) will be displayed and can be added with a tap. New Conversation, Browsing Caregivers—Alternatively, you can use the full staff browsing interface (the same as the Staff Tab) to find caregivers. The entire care team or unit can be added with a single tap. New Conversation, Typing Subject—One way to add a subject is to type the name of the patient or location. Any matches will be displayed and can be added with a tap. New Conversation, Browsing Subjects—Alternatively, you can use the full patient browsing interface (the same as the Patients Tab) to find a subject. Conversation with Picture—Pictures can be taken and displayed inline in a conversation. Multiparty Conversation—Each message is annotated with the sending party and the read status of your latest message is indicated. Conversation Details—You can see the subject, who is involved in this conversation and call them.


Staff Tab—This tab allows you to browse the staff members of any unit and also search for a specific caregiver, unit, or location. List—The tab defaults to displaying your assigned unit. Throughout the Staff Tab, units to which you are assigned are indicated with the bookmark icon. You can see your team, which is all the caregivers on your unit who share patient assignments with you, your entire unit, and a list of commonly needed contacts for the unit (such as pharmacy, social workers, chaplain, dietary, etc.). From this screen, you can also access the dial pad, perform a search, and browse to other units. Other Units—Other units within the enterprise can be browsed. They are grouped by a common ancestor. Tapping a unit displays the staff on that unit. Units to which you are assigned are indicated. Non-home List—When you are viewing a unit that is not one of your assigned units, you can go back “home” to it with just a tap. Tapped Search—Tapping the search field invokes the search screen. Search is very powerful and you are presented with a list of search criteria as a hint. Search “Carol”—This is an example of searching for a caregiver by name. Matching staff are displayed along with their assignment, their current location, and their availability. Tapping the row will navigate to that staff's details. Search “Onc”—This is an example of searching for a unit. The list is always kept in a particular order—Staff, Units, Locations, Favorites unless no results are found for that section. For a unit, its hierarchy in the enterprise is shown. Tapping will navigate to the list of staff in that unit. Search “4”—This example shows results for units, locations (which can be patient locations or ancillary locations), and favorites. No Results—If no results at all are found, the user is reminded of the search criteria. Dial Pad—There is an in-app dial pad so that an arbitrary number within the hospital may be called. Recents—This is a list of recent incoming and outgoing phone calls.


Me Tab—This tab displays information relevant to the currently logged in user. The top portion shows static details as well as the ability to change their availability. The bottom portion shows calls and favorites. Start—From here, the user can access settings and in-app help. They can also change availability. The Active Calls tab displays this user's open nurse calls. New calls are displayed at the top with a new indicator. You can see the state of the call, the originating location and patient, the priority, and the elapsed time. If there are actions to be taken on the call, a swipe to the left will reveal them, as in the second row. Favorites—A user can keep a list of favorite staff. They can be reordered and deleted at will. Add Favorite—There are currently two kinds of favorites: Arbitrary and Staff. Arbitrary favorites require the user to enter a label and a phone number. Staff favorites require the user to select a staff or location using the browse staff interface (the same as the Staff Tab). This choice must be made first. New Arbitrary Favorite—The favorite can be given any label and phone number and the app will attempt to dial the number as-is. Change Availability (DnD Inactive)—Tapping “Change” on the Me Tab will reveal the abilities to go on Do Not Disturb (DnD) or Sign Out completely. When going on DnD, you are able to choose a duration. One minute before DnD ends, you will receive a notification alerting you to the end of your DnD session. This notification will give you the option to further extend it another 5 minutes or let it elapse. Change Availability (DnD Active)—When DnD is active, it can be terminated at any time.


A Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) stack is used to provide secure voice, video, and text communication between device-to-device communication of devices 52 and between devices 52 and other equipment of system 50.


Referring now to FIG. 47, a block diagram 400 shows an embodiment in which mobile device 52a of a first caregiver is equipped with received signal strength indication (RSSI) software 402, as indicated by dotted arrow 404. Software 402 is Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE) Central software in the illustrative example. Staff members in the vicinity of mobile device 52a have mobile phones 52b-f that serve as BLE peripherals of device 52a. Based on the received signal strength of messages between device 52a and each of devices 52b-f, an RSSI is determined by device 52a. In the illustrative example of FIG. 47, mobile devices 52b-f are carried by five different staff members as indicated by the text Staff 1-5 in each block corresponding to devices 52b-f. As also indicated in the blocks corresponding to devices 52b-f, a numerical RSSI value is provided indicating, for example, the distance in feet between device 52a and each of devices 52b-f. In the illustrative example of FIG. 47, device 52b is 55 feet away from device 52a, device 52c is 50 feet away from device 52a, device 52d is 60 feet away from device 52a, device 52e is 62 feet away from device 52a, and device 52f is 70 feet away from device 52a.


Software 402 is operable to provide a rank ordered listing 406 on the display screen of device 52a screen to indicate the relative locations or distances of the five staff members, from closest to farthest, away from the caregiver carrying device 52a. In the illustrative example, Staff 2 is the closest to the caregiver carrying device 52, Staff 1 is the second closest, Staff 3 is the third closest, Staff 4 is the fourth closest, and Staff 5 is the farthest away from the caregiver carrying 52a. It should be understood that list 406 may include more or less than five staff members depending upon how many mobile devices 52 are within the reception range of device 52a for purposes of determining the RSSI using software 402. In some embodiments, the staff members shown on list 406 are contacted by the caregiver carrying device 52a in response to touching or otherwise selecting the Staff 1-5 text in list 406. The Staff 1-5 text in FIG. 47 is used in place of the caregiver names for illustrative purposes. That is, this disclosure contemplates that list 406 contains the names of the staff members whose mobile devices 52 are in reception range of device 52a. Selection of one of the staff member names in list 406 results in a voice call being made to the respective mobile device 52a-f, as the case may be, of the selected staff member or results in a text message window appearing for sending a text message to the mobile device 52a-f of the selected staff member. In some embodiments, a window or screen may appear in response to selection of a staff member name on list 406 giving the caregiver carrying device 52a the option to place a voice call or compose a text message.


In some embodiments, mobile devices 52b-f advertise the availability of the associated staff member to device 52a such that unavailable staff members do not appear on list 406. Messages to device 52a from devices 52b-f regarding staff member availability include some identifying data and a security token in some embodiments. It is contemplated by this disclosure, therefore, that the caregiver carrying device 52a opens up software 402 via an appropriate selection of an icon on the display screen of device 52a when the caregiver wishes to contact another staff member, such as for help with a patient, just to give one example.


In some embodiments, the caregiver carrying device 52a is able to filter the other staff members that are to appear on list 406 by role. For example, the caregiver carrying device 52a may want to find out which housekeeping staff is in the vicinity or which nursing technicians are in the vicinity, just to give a couple of examples. Thus, only the staff members having the selected role or roles in those embodiments permitting selection of more than one role, will appear on list 406 and staff members not having the selected role(s) are omitted from list 406. The software 402 scans the advertisements from the mobile devices 52 within reception range after the roles are selected. The software 402 resolves the information from the advertisements into names of staff members and their roles. Then, software 402 operates to display on list 406 the staff members meeting the search criteria (e.g., roles) based on the RSSI as described above. The caregiver carrying device 52a can then call or text a selected staff member as also described above.


Referring now to FIG. 48, is a screen shot of another example of an Availability screen 408, similar to screen 294 of FIG. 23 and screen 306 of FIG. 24 discussed above. Screen 408 includes an Automatic radio button 410 that a caregiver uses to turn on and off, via sequential selections of button 410, an Automatic availability function. When the Automatic availability function is turned on, or active, radio button 410 is filled in and the caregiver's availability status changes automatically as the caregiver moves about the healthcare facility. For example, when the caregiver is in a patient room, the caregiver's availability status is set to unavailable and when the caregiver leaves the patient room and is in a public area of the healthcare facility, such as a hallway, the caregiver's availability is set to available. In some embodiments, the Automatic availability function is turned on as a default setting during the caregiver's shift. When the Automatic availability function is turned off, radio button 410 is empty or not filled in.


Screen 408 of FIG. 48 also has a Do Not Disturb radio button 412 that a caregiver uses to turn on and off, via sequential selections, a Do Not Disturb function. When the Do Not Disturb function is turned on, or active, radio button 412 is filled in and the caregiver ceases to receive alerts. The caregiver is also indicated as unavailable on other devices of the system 50 in response to the Do Not Disturb function being active. In response to the Do Not Disturb function being turned off, radio button 412 is empty or not filled in and the caregiver is, once again, able to receive alerts. Screen 408 also has Sign Out icon 302 which operates the same as described above in connection with FIGS. 23 and 24. Thus, icon 302 is selected by the caregiver to sign out at the end of their shift. After sign out, the caregiver is no longer available to receive alert messages occurring within system 50. An up arrow icon 414 is provided in the top region of screen 408 and is selected by the caregiver to close out of screen 408 and return to the previous screen.


Referring now to FIG. 49, a block diagram of a caregiver and staff information system 50′, similar to system 50 of FIG. 1, is shown having a network architecture according to an embodiment contemplated by the present disclosure. System 50′ is illustrative of the scenario in which a healthcare facility has two different types of nurse call systems. Like system 50, system 50′ has caregivers with mobile devices such as phones 52 (only one mobile device 52 is shown in FIG. 49), a nurse call server 86 and an ADT server 96. Nurse call server 86 is part of the first nurse call system of overall system 50′ and a second nurse call server 416 is included in system 50′ as part of the second nurse call system. System 50′ is configured so that alerts arising in both the first and second nurse call systems are able to be sent to mobile phones 52 for display using the caregiver and staff communication software application contemplated herein and described in connection with FIGS. 1-48 and 50-59.


System 50′ includes a Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) server 418 that receives SIP Audio from mobile phones 52 as shown in FIG. 49. SIP server 418 communicates with nurse call server 416 via a Private Branch Exchange (PBX) bridge 420. However, no PBX bridge is needed in order for SIP server 418 to communicate with nurse call server 86. Thus, the first and second nurse call systems are configured for different types of voice communications in system 50′. Alerts occurring within the first nurse call system are communicated from nurse call server 86 to a publish/subscribe application which, in the illustrative embodiment, is stored on a publish/subscribe server 422 which, in turn, provides the alerts to a messaging service application or server 424 for communication to one or more phones 52. In some embodiments, the publish/subscribe application or server 422 keeps track of which phones 52 are to receive which alerts occurring in the first nurse call system. For example, the publish/subscribe application or server 422 includes information regarding the phone numbers of devices 52 of caregivers that are assigned to the patient or room from which the alerts are being generated.


Nurse call server 86 of system 50′ also sends alert data, configuration data, and patients data for storage in a database 426 as indicated by the arrows labeled Alerts, Configuration, and Patients that extend from server 86 to database 426 in FIG. 49. Database 426 is also in two-way or bidirectional communication with a people management capability server 428. Mobile phones 52 are a further source of information for server 428 and provide data regarding alerts, extensions, locations, and patients to server 428.


Nurse call server 416 of the second nurse call system of overall system 50′ sends alerts and staff assignment data to a clinical interface application or server 430. Clinical interface server 430 separates the incoming data from nurse call server 416 such that the alerts are sent to a configuration service application or server 432 and such that the staff assignment data is sent to a patient/staff service application or server 434. Server 434 is linked to database 426 to communicate patient/staff assignment data to database 426.


Configuration service server 432 reformats and otherwise converts the alert data received from the clinical interface application 430 of the second nurse call system so as to be compatible with the format and protocols required by the caregiver and staff communication software application contemplated herein and described in connection with FIGS. 1-48 and 50-59. An Enterprise Configuration Tool (ECT) 436 is provided for programming the manner in which the configuration service server 432 reformats or converts the incoming alerts from clinical interface 430 into the outgoing alerts. For example, the ECT 436 is used to alter the organization and structure of the incoming alerts.


The ECT 436 also is used to reconfigure the location structure data from the second nurse call system to facilitate mapping into database 426 in the same manner that location structure data is mapped from the first nurse call system. In this regard, the ECT 436 has an import/export capability. The staff-to-patient assignment information is similarly mapped by the patient/staff service server 434 so as to match the manner that staff-to-patient assignment information is mapped in the first nurse call system. The reconfigured location structure and staff-to-patient assignment data is stored in database 426. The ECT 436 is a software application that, in some embodiments, is executed by server 432 and, in other embodiments, is executed on its own server or some other server.


The reconfigured and/or reformatted alerts from the configuration service server 432 are transmitted to the publish subscribe server 422 which, in turn, provides the reconfigured and/or reformatted alerts from the second nurse call system to the messaging service server 424 just like the alerts originating from the first nurse call server which do not need to be reconfigured or reformatted prior to receipt by the publish subscribe server 422 or the messaging service server 424. The alerts originating from both the first and second nurse call systems are transmitted from the messaging service server 424 to the appropriate mobile devices 52 of caregivers assigned to the patient or rooms from which the alerts were generated.


In the illustrative example of FIG. 49, a health level seven (HL7) admission/discharge/transfer (ADT) feed or server 438 communicates raw HL7 ADT data to nurse call server 86 and ADT server 96. The raw HL7 ADT data, in some instances, also may be indicative of alert conditions that, in turn, are sent from nurse call server 86 to one or more mobile devices 52 via servers 422, 424. The ADT server 96 extracts patient ADT data from the raw HL7 ADT data and transmits it to an integration service server 440 which, in turn, transmits the patient ADT data to patient/staff service server 434. Server 434 subsequently transmits the patient ADT data to database 426 for storage. The staff-to-patient assignment data and/or the staff-to-room assignment data and/or the staff-to-patient-to-room assignment data from the second nurse call system is stored in database 426 and is used by other portions of system 50′ so that the same assignment data does not need to be entered a second time in some other portion of system 50′.


Referring now to FIG. 50, an example is given of a first My Availability screen 442 that appears on the display screen of a caregiver's mobile device 52 in some embodiments contemplated herein. For example, screen 442 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 after Do Not Disturb icon 412 of screen 408 of FIG. 48 is selected. Screen 442 has a line of text 444 indicating that the caregiver has three minutes remaining of a Do Not Disturb status. A Do Not Disturb icon 446 appears above the line of text 444 to further indicate that the caregiver has selected Do Not Disturb as their availability status. Screen 442 also includes a graphical End button 448 that the caregiver selects to end the Do Not Disturb status and a graphical +5 min. button 450 that the caregiver selects to extend the Do Not Disturb status by an additional five minutes. Beneath buttons 448, 450, screen 442 includes a menu 452 having, from top to bottom, a My Profile icon 454 that the caregiver selects to navigate to their profile information, a Help Center icon 456 that the caregiver selects to link to a help center, an About icon 458 that a caregiver selects to obtain further information about patients, and a Log Out icon 460 that a caregiver selects to log out of the caregiver and staff communication software application.


Referring now to FIG. 51, an example is given of a second My Availability screen 462 that appears on the display screen of the caregiver's mobile device 52 in some embodiments contemplated herein. For example, screen 462 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 after Automatic icon 410 of screen 408 of FIG. 48 is selected and after the caregiver enters a patient room. Screen 462 has a line of text 464 indicating that the caregiver is Busy and in a patient room. A Busy icon 466 appears to the left of the line of text 464 to further indicate that the caregiver's current status is Busy. Screen 462 also includes a graphical Begin Do Not Disturb button 468 that is located beneath the line of text 464 and icon 466 and that the caregiver selects to change their status to the Do Not Disturb status. Screen 462 also includes menu 452 and icons 454, 456, 458, 460 and the description of these above is equally applicable.


Referring now to FIG. 52, an example is given of a third My Availability screen 470 that appears on the display screen of the caregiver's mobile device 52 in some embodiments contemplated herein. For example, screen 470 appears on the caregiver's mobile device 52 after Automatic icon 410 of screen 408 of FIG. 48 is selected and after the caregiver enters a public area of the healthcare facility, such as a hallway. Screen 470 has a line of text 472 indicating that the caregiver is Available and an Available icon 474 appears to the left of the line of text 472 to further indicate that the caregiver's current status is Available. Like screen 462, screen 470 also includes the graphical Begin Do Not Disturb button 468 that is located beneath the line of text 472 and icon 474 and that the caregiver selects to change their status to the Do Not Disturb status. Screen 470 also includes menu 452 and icons 454, 456, 458, 460 and the description of these above is equally applicable.


Icons 446, 466, 474 of respective screens 452, 462, 470 are color coded in some embodiments. For example, icon 446 is red, icon 466 is yellow, and icon 474 is green in one contemplated embodiment. In other embodiments, a different color coding scheme may be used for each of icons 446, 466, 474.


According to the present disclosure, one or more desktop computers including computer devices such as primary staff console 78 (aka master nurse station computer), staff console 80, staff terminal 82, or a caregiver tablet computer (similar to patient tablets 56) of FIG. 1 also have the caregiver and staff communication software application loaded thereon such that the desktop computer(s) is/are able to engage in secure voice and text communications with mobile devices 52 of other caregivers. Examples of the manner in which the caregiver and staff communication software application is used on a desktop computer are provided in FIGS. 53-59 and are discussed below.


Referring now to FIG. 53, an example is given of a Past Conversation screen 480 that appears on a desktop computer during use of the caregiver and staff communication software communication application contemplated herein. Screen 480 includes a My Messages window 482 on a left side of screen 480 and a Conversation window 484 to the right of window 482. Window 482 takes up roughly one third of the area of screen 480 and window 484 takes up roughly two thirds of screen 480, not including a header area above windows 482, 484 and a footer area beneath windows 482, 484. Window 482 includes a list of the past conversations in which the caregiver using the desktop computer has participated.


In the header area of screen 480, a box 486 indicates the number of past conversations appearing in window 482. In the illustrative example of FIG. 53, box 486 indicates that there have been twelve past conversations for the caregiver. However, window 482 only presents information, in abbreviated form, for seven of the twelve past conversations. Thus, window 482 includes a scroll bar 488 and a movable scroll icon 490 that can be selected and dragged along bar 488 to reveal the other past conversation information that is currently not displayed in window 482. A scroll arrow 492 is illustrated above scroll bar 488 in the illustrative example and can be selected to scroll through the past conversation information in window 482 as well. A similar scroll arrow appears beneath scroll bar 488 in appropriate circumstances.


The abbreviated past conversation information in window 482 is provided in blocks 484. Each block contains a date (e.g., 28 February for three of blocks 494 of window 482 in the illustrative example) or a duration, in minutes, since the most recent entry of a past conversation or indicates “just now” if the conversation is ongoing currently. A duration cutoff, such as 5 minutes, may delineate whether to indicate the duration in minutes since the most recent entry or whether to designate the conversation as “just now.” The abbreviated past conversation information in blocks 494 also includes the name, or a portion of the name, of the caregiver that initiated the past conversation; the name, or a portion of the name, of the patient to which the past conversation pertains; the room number of the patient to which the past conversation pertains; and the caregiver's most recent entry, or a portion of the caregiver's most recent entry, in the past conversation.


Window 482 lists the abbreviated past conversation information in blocks 494 in order from most recent, at the top of window 482, to oldest, at the bottom of window 482. Selection of one of blocks 494 by the caregiver, such as by placing a cursor over the block 494 and clicking a button of a mouse or on a keyboard or by touching the desired block 494, results in the selected past conversation being displayed in window 484 of screen 480. A search box 496 appears in window 482 above blocks 494. The caregiver is able to select box 496 and then type a search string into box 496 to search for past conversations having the search string therein. Thus, use of search box 496 filters out past conversations not meeting the search criteria and only those past conversations meeting the search criteria appear in window 492.


Window 484 shows the messages between the various caregivers who participated in the past conversation selected from the list in window 482. The name and room number of the patient about which the selected past conversation pertained is shown at the top window 484. Beneath the patient's name and room number, the names of the participants of the selected past conversation are shown. In the illustrative example, the appropriate one of the availability icons 446, 466, 474 for each past message participant is shown to the left of the name of each participant of the past conversation. Icons 446, 466, 474 in window 484 indicate the participant's current availability status. Icons 446, 466, 474 were discussed above in connection with FIGS. 50-52 and indicate the same availability status (unavailable or Do Not Disturb, Busy, or Available, as the case may be) on the desktop computer as they do on mobile devices 52.


After a past conversation has been selected in window 482 for display in window 484, the caregiver using the desktop computer can post another message in the conversation. A message box 498 appears at the bottom of window 484 beneath the selected past conversation. The caregiver is able to select box 498 and then type a message into box 498. After the caregiver completes the desired message, the caregiver selects a post icon 500 to post the message in box 498 to the conversation. Posting the message in this manner results in the message being sent to the mobile device of each of the participants of the past conversation appearing in window 484. Once posted to the conversation, the message in box 498 disappears from box 498 and appears in window 484 beneath the previously most recent message in the conversation.


Just above box 498 at the bottom of window 484 are a set of icons, each having a predetermined short word or phrase that can be selected to appear in box 498. In the illustrative example, these icons include a “Yes” icon 502, an “Ok” icon 504, a “No” icon 506, and an “On my way” icon 508. Thus, icons 502, 504, 506, 508 are common phrases that caregivers use during their shifts to communicate with one another. By providing icons 502, 504, 506, 508 in window 485, caregiver efficiency is increased because they do not need to manually type these common words and phrases into box 498 each time they wish to use them. After the caregiver is finished selecting one or more of icons 502, 504, 506, 508 to cause the associated word or phrase to appear in box 498, the caregiver selects post icon 500 as discussed above to post the message in box 498 to the conversation appearing in window 484.


In the top right header area of screen 480, a connectivity icon 510 is provided to indicate the connectivity status of the desktop computer to the network (e.g., other devices) of system 50. For example, in some embodiments, icon 510 is colored green to indicate that the desktop computer is successfully communicating in system 50 and is colored red or amber to indicate a connectivity problem. In the bottom right footer area of screen 480, a status board icon 512 is provided and is selectable by the caregiver to bring up a status board for display on the desktop computer. Additional details of a status board can be found in U.S. Pat. No. 8,779,924, particularly with reference to FIG. 3, and which is hereby incorporated by reference herein for all that it teaches to the extent not inconsistent with the present disclosure which shall control as to any inconsistencies.


Referring now to FIG. 54, an example is given of a Create Conversation screen 514 that appears on the desktop computer during use of the caregiver and staff communication software communication application if one of the past conversations is not being displayed in window 484. Screen 514 of FIG. 54 has many of the same fields, boxes, and icons as screen 480 of FIG. 53 and so, like reference numbers are used and the description above of screen 480 is equally applicable to the like portions of screen 514. A couple of the main differences between screen 480 and screen 514 is that window 484 of screen 514 includes an About box 516 and a Participants box 518 at the top region of window 484. Box 516 lists the name and room number of the patient about which the conversation being created by the caregiver is to pertain. Box 518 lists the one or more caregivers who are selected for participation in the conversation being created.


As shown in FIG. 55, in response to a room number of a patient being typed into box 516, a drop down menu 520 appears in window 484 beneath box 516. Menu 520 is a dynamic menu in that, as the caregiver types more digits into box 516, only those room numbers and associated patient names matching the partially typed room number are displayed in the menu 520. Thus, when the first digit of the patient's room number, “2” in the illustrative example, is typed into box 516, all room numbers that begin with the first digit are shown in menu 520. Then, when the second digit of the patient's room number, “1” in the illustrative example, is typed into box 516, all room numbers that begin with the first two digits are shown in menu 520. As shown in FIG. 55, the third digit of the patient's room number, “5” in the illustrative example, has been typed into box 518 and, therefore, menu 520 of FIG. 55 lists the patient room numbers and patient names of all of the rooms having the first three typed digits, “215” in the illustrative example.


If desired, the caregiver can select the desired patient from the menu 520 before the complete room number of the patient has been typed. In the illustrative example, menu 520 is of a certain size that, in many cases, does not permit all patient rooms that meet the partially typed room number criteria from being viewable in the menu 520. Thus, a scroll bar 522, a scroll icon 524, a scroll up arrow icon 526, and a scroll down arrow icon 528 are provided at the right of menu 520. The caregiver using the desktop can select and drag icon 524 along bar 522 or can select icons 526, 528 to scroll up and down, respectively, to view other room numbers meeting the search criteria. In FIG. 54, box 516 contains “2157—Miriam G. Smith” therein and so, in the illustrative example of FIG. 55, it can be seen that the caregiver would need to scroll down to view the room 2157 information for subsequent selection. After a patient name and room number is selected from menu 520, the selection appears in box 516 and menu 520 disappears from screen 514.


Box 516 of window 484 of screen 514 also includes a down arrow or search icon 530 that the caregiver can select, if desired, to bring up a menu 532 of rooms and patient names as shown, for example, in FIG. 56. Thus, selection of icon 530 to bring up menu 532 is an alternative way to search for a desired patient rather than typing a room number into box 516. As shown in FIG. 56, menu 532 includes a My Patients tab 534, a My Unit tab 536, and an All tab 538. In the given FIG. 56 example, the My Patients tab 534 has been selected and so menu 532 lists the room number and patient names for the patients that have been assigned to the caregiver using the desktop computer. Selecting My Unit tab 536 results in menu 532 listing all room numbers and patient names for the caregiver's unit and selecting the All tab 538 results in menu 532 listing all patients in the healthcare facility (or at least all the patients known in system 50 in connection with the caregiver and staff communication software application).


The right hand portion of menu 532 has scroll bar 522, scroll icon 524, scroll up arrow icon 526, and scroll down arrow icon 528 that operate the same in connection with menu 532 as was discussed above in connection with menu 520. Thus, the description is not repeated. Above tabs 534, 536, 538 is a search box 540 in which a patient's name or room number can be typed by the caregiver as an alternative search methodology. In some embodiments, menu 532 is dynamic and lists the patients and room numbers meeting the search criteria of the partially typed information in box 540. After a patient name and room number is selected from menu 532, the selection appears in box 516 and menu 532 disappears from screen 514. Alternatively, if the caregiver decides not to make a selection from menu 532, then a close icon 542 is selected to close menu 532.


As shown in FIG. 57, in response to a participant's name being typed into box 518, a drop down menu 544 appears in window 484 beneath box 518. Menu 544 is a dynamic menu in that, as the caregiver types more letters into box 518, only those participant names matching the partially typed name are displayed in the menu 544. Thus, when the first letter of the participant's name, “M” in the illustrative example, is typed into box 518, all participants that begin with the letter “M” are shown in menu 544. Then, when the second letter of the participant's name, “i” in the illustrative example, is typed into box 518, all names that begin with the first two letters “Mi” are shown in menu 544.


If desired, the caregiver can select the desired participant name from the menu 544 before the complete name of the participant has been typed. In the illustrative example of FIG. 57, the number of names meeting the search criteria in box 518 is small enough to be displayed in menu 544 without the need for any a scroll bar, a scroll icon, or scroll arrow icons. However, if more names meet the search criteria than there is room to display in menu 544, then a scroll bar, icon, and arrows are provided to the right of menu 544. After a participant's name is selected from menu 544, the selection appears in box 518 and menu 544 disappears from screen 514.


To the right of box 518 of window 484 of screen 514 is a staff search icon 546 that the caregiver can select, if desired, to bring up a menu 548 of staff names for possible selection as participants in a new conversation as shown, for example, in FIG. 58. Thus, selection of icon 546 to bring up menu 548 is an alternative way to search for one or more desired conversation participants rather than typing a participant name in box 518. As shown in FIG. 58, menu 548 includes a My Team tab 550, a My Unit tab 552, and an All tab 554. In the given FIG. 58 example, the My Team tab 550 has been selected and so menu 548 lists the staff names for the staff that have been assigned to the same team as the caregiver using the desktop computer. Selecting My Unit tab 552 results in menu 548 listing the staff names for the caregiver's unit and selecting the All tab 554 results in menu 548 listing all staff in the healthcare facility (or at least all the staff known in system 50 in connection with the caregiver and staff communication software application).


The right hand portion of menu 548 has scroll bar 522, scroll icon 524, scroll up arrow icon 526, and scroll down arrow icon 528 that operate the same in connection with menu 548 as was discussed above in connection with menu 520. Thus, the description is not repeated. Above tabs 550, 552, 554 is a search box 556 in which a staff name can be typed by the caregiver as an alternative search methodology. In some embodiments, menu 548 is dynamic and lists the staff names meeting the search criteria of the partially typed information in box 556. After a staff name is selected from menu 548, the selection appears in box 518 and menu 548 disappears from screen 514. Alternatively, if the caregiver decides not to make a selection from menu 548, then a close icon 558 is selected to close menu 532. To the left of each staff name in menu 548 is the appropriate availability icon 446, 466, 474 for each staff member based on their current availability. Icons 446, 466, 474 were discussed above in connection with FIGS. 50-52 and indicate the same availability status (unavailable or Do Not Disturb, Busy, or Available, as the case may be) in menu 548 of the desktop computer as they do on mobile devices 52.


As shown in FIGS. 54 and 58, window 484 of screen 514 includes an Add Care Team icon 460 that is selectable to add the caregiver's entire care team as participants in the conversation being created. As shown in FIG. 59, icon 460 has been selected and the staff names and respective availability icons 446, 466, 474 of the entire care team appears in the Participants text field at the top of window 484. In the FIG. 59 example, there are more staff members on the caregiver's care team than can fit into the allotted space of the Participants text field and so an expand list icon 562 is provided at the end of the list of staff names that are able to fit into the Participants text field. Selection of icon 562 by the caregiver results in a Care Team list 564 being shown in window 484 beneath the Participants text field. List 564 includes all of the names and respective availability status icons 446, 466, 474 of the caregiver's Care Team.


After at least one participant is listed in box 518 of window 484 of screen 514, respectively, a Create Conversation icon 566 becomes active as shown in FIGS. 54-56 and is selectable by the caregiver to begin a conversation with the one or more participants listed in box 518. FIGS. 57 and 58 show icon 566 grayed out in an inactive state due to no participants being listed in box 518 of those two figures. Alternatively, if the caregiver using the desktop computer decides that they no longer wish to create a conversation, the caregiver selects a Cancel icon 568 to abort the create conversation process. If any patient or staff information appears in boxes 516, 518 when icon 568 is selected, the information is deleted and boxes 516, 518 become empty. After the caregiver selects Create Conversation icon 566, then message box 498 and icons 500, 502, 504, 506, 508 appear at the bottom region of window 484 as shown in FIG. 59 and are used by the caregiver to create messages in the same manner as described above.


With regard to the availability status of the staff as discussed herein, the following functions are enabled or disabled as the case may be in some embodiments: 1) Available—The caregiver is logged in and can receive phone calls and text messages on their mobile devices 52; 2) Busy—The caregiver is logged in, is located in a patient room, can receive phone calls and text messages, but is not able to respond using their mobile devices 52; 3) Do Not Disturb—The caregiver is logged in, marked as unavailable, can leave voice mail and send text messages, but notification and response may not be immediate; and 4) Not Logged In—The caregiver can leave voice mail and send text messages, but responses and notifications will not be received until the next log in for the caregiver.


In some embodiments of system 50, the conversations between caregivers using mobile devices 52 and/or the desktop computer having the caregiver and staff communication software application discussed herein are stored in EMR server 94 if a patient is designated in connection with the conversation. Thus, the EMR server 94 is periodically updated with the conversations pertaining to patients having EMR records in server 94 such that the associated patient's records in server 94 each contain a record of the caregiver conversations pertaining to that patient. In other embodiments, the conversations between caregivers using mobile devices 52 and/or the desktop computer are not stored in the EMR server 94, or any server for that matter, but instead, are automatically deleted after a period of time or after ADT server 96 sends a message to mobile devices 52 and/or the desktop computer, or a server in communication with these devices, that a particular patient has been discharged from the healthcare facility.


Although certain illustrative embodiments have been described in detail above, many embodiments, variations and modifications are possible that are still within the scope and spirit of this disclosure as described herein and as defined in the following claims.

Claims
  • 1. A system comprising a plurality of mobile devices carried by caregivers;at least one server for sending alert messages to the plurality of mobile devices; anda plurality of patient devices in a patient room, the plurality of patient devices being configured to generate the alert messages in response to interactions with a patient in the patient room, wherein the plurality of patient devices comprise a patient bed, a pillow speaker unit, and a patient tablet.
  • 2. The system of claim 1, further comprising a processor located at the patient room, the processor receiving the alert messages and determining for each alert message a message priority designation from a first priority designation or a second priority designation, the processor forwarding each alert message along with its respective message priority designation for receipt by the server which then forwards the respective alert message and the respective priority designation to at least one mobile device of a caregiver assigned to the patient.
  • 3. The system of claim 2, wherein the plurality of mobile devices are configured to permit the caregivers to accept responsibility for responding to respective alert messages or to re-route respective alert messages to other caregivers.
  • 4. The system of claim 1, wherein at least one mobile device of the plurality of mobile devices stores and executes a machine readable medium, the machine readable medium being non-transitory and comprising a plurality of instructions that, in response to being executed, results in a mobile device of a caregiver: receiving at the mobile device multiple alerts relating to multiple patients assigned to the caregiver;displaying on a display screen of the mobile device a first list of accepted alerts that the caregiver has accepted and that have not been escalated to another caregiver; anddisplaying on the display screen of the mobile device a second list of escalated alerts that have been escalated to the caregiver from another caregiver.
  • 5. The system of claim 2, wherein at least one mobile device of the plurality of mobile devices stores and executes a machine readable medium, the machine readable medium being non-transitory and comprising a plurality of instructions that, in response to being executed, results in a mobile device of a caregiver: receiving at the mobile device multiple alerts relating to multiple patients assigned to the caregiver;displaying on a display screen of the mobile device a first list of accepted alerts that the caregiver has accepted and that have not been escalated to another caregiver; anddisplaying on the display screen of the mobile device a second list of escalated alerts that have been escalated to the caregiver from another caregiver.
  • 6. The system of claim 3, wherein at least one mobile device of the plurality of mobile devices stores and executes a machine readable medium, the machine readable medium being non-transitory and comprising a plurality of instructions that, in response to being executed, results in a mobile device of a caregiver: receiving at the mobile device multiple alerts relating to multiple patients assigned to the caregiver;displaying on a display screen of the mobile device a first list of accepted alerts that the caregiver has accepted and that have not been escalated to another caregiver; anddisplaying on the display screen of the mobile device a second list of escalated alerts that have been escalated to the caregiver from another caregiver.
  • 7. The system of claim 1, further comprising a desktop computer having a display on which a Past Conversation screen is displayed, the Past Conversation screen being usable to view a past text message conversation between other caregivers about a selected patient.
  • 8. The system of claim 7, wherein the Past Conversation screen also displays a current availability status of each of the caregivers involved in the past text message conversation.
  • 9. The system of claim 1, further comprising a desktop computer having a display on which a Create Conversation screen is displayed, the Create Conversation screen being usable to start a text message conversation between a user of the desktop computer and one or more other caregivers about a selected patient.
  • 10. The system of claim 9, wherein the Create Conversation screen permits selection of the patient about which the text message conversation pertains by using a first drop down menu listing all patients admitted in the unit or by using a second drop down menu that appears on the Create Conversation screen in response typing a portion of a patient name.
  • 11. The system of claim 9, wherein the Create Conversation screen permits selection of the one or more other caregivers to participate in the text message conversation by using a first drop down menu listing all caregivers on duty in the unit or by using a second drop down menu that appears on the Create Conversation screen in response typing a portion of a caregiver name.
  • 12. The system of claim 9, wherein the Create Conversation screen includes an icon that is selectable to designate all caregivers on duty in the unit as participants in the text message conversation.
  • 13. The system of claim 9, wherein the Create Conversation screen displays an availability status of each of the caregivers involved in the text message conversation.
  • 14. The system of claim 1, wherein the plurality of mobile devices are configured to display on a display screen of respective mobile devices a first icon indicating the caregiver's availability status for accepting more alert messages.
  • 15. The system of claim 14, wherein the plurality of mobile devices are further configured to display on the display screen of the respective mobile devices a second icon that is selectable by the caregiver to change the availability status.
  • 16. The system of claim 15, wherein the plurality of mobile devices are configured to display on the display screen of the respective mobile devices a menu of availability status choices in response to selection of the second icon.
  • 17. The system of claim 16, wherein the availability status choices include two or more of the following: All, Available, Busy, or Unavailable.
  • 18. The system of claim 1, wherein the plurality of mobile devices are configured to display on a display screen of respective mobile devices a first selectable icon that, in response to being selected, results in the caregiver's availability status being set to an automatic mode in which the caregiver's availability is changed automatically as the caregiver moves throughout the healthcare facility.
  • 19. The system of claim 18, wherein the plurality of mobile devices are configured to display on the display screen of the respective mobile devices a second selectable icon that, in response to being selected, results in the caregiver's availability being set to a do not disturb mode in which the caregiver is unavailable.
  • 20. The system of claim 1, wherein the plurality of mobile devices are configured to display on a display screen of respective mobile devices at least one screen that enables the caregiver to select a numerical length of time during which no new incoming alert messages will be received by the mobile device and during which the caregiver will be designated as unavailable.
Parent Case Info

The present application is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 16/143,971, filed Sep. 27, 2018, now U.S. Pat. No. 10,957,445, which claims the benefit, under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e), of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/568,671, filed Oct. 5, 2017, and U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/660,576, filed Apr. 20, 2018, each of which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.

US Referenced Citations (560)
Number Name Date Kind
4237344 Moore Dec 1980 A
4555805 Talbot Nov 1985 A
4634815 Marquis Jan 1987 A
4669393 Wuthrich Jun 1987 A
4730715 Siegenthaler Mar 1988 A
4730821 Fluckiger Mar 1988 A
4731868 Dreier Mar 1988 A
4735344 Wuethrich Apr 1988 A
4742903 Trummer May 1988 A
4750192 Dzung Jun 1988 A
4785389 Kislovski Nov 1988 A
4793405 Diggelmann et al. Dec 1988 A
4815579 Fritz Mar 1989 A
4819780 Trummer et al. Apr 1989 A
4823694 Siegenthaler Apr 1989 A
4827225 Lee May 1989 A
4853686 Kueng et al. Aug 1989 A
4871125 Haueter Oct 1989 A
4872185 Braun et al. Oct 1989 A
4887807 Berger et al. Dec 1989 A
4907264 Seiler et al. Mar 1990 A
4914691 Berger Apr 1990 A
4928273 Protopapas May 1990 A
4958976 Haueter Sep 1990 A
4984247 Kaufmann et al. Jan 1991 A
5003593 Mihm, Jr. Mar 1991 A
5003598 Kunstadt Mar 1991 A
5016546 Haueter May 1991 A
5056204 Bartschi Oct 1991 A
5081389 Abbott et al. Jan 1992 A
5170412 Massey Dec 1992 A
5177765 Holland et al. Jan 1993 A
5177766 Holland et al. Jan 1993 A
5181225 Neeser et al. Jan 1993 A
5203263 Berger et al. Apr 1993 A
5214703 Massey et al. May 1993 A
5216691 Kaufmann Jun 1993 A
5220448 Vogel et al. Jun 1993 A
5227907 Rao et al. Jul 1993 A
5237506 Horbal et al. Aug 1993 A
5265128 Widmer et al. Nov 1993 A
5276844 Aebi et al. Jan 1994 A
5278541 Wicht et al. Jan 1994 A
5301116 Grunig Apr 1994 A
5305384 Ashby et al. Apr 1994 A
5317566 Joshi May 1994 A
5317640 Callias May 1994 A
5319355 Russek Jun 1994 A
5319363 Welch et al. Jun 1994 A
5319486 Vogel et al. Jun 1994 A
5319643 Rao et al. Jun 1994 A
5334952 Maddy et al. Aug 1994 A
5365233 Schaub Nov 1994 A
5375118 Rao et al. Dec 1994 A
5383045 Vogel et al. Jan 1995 A
5384852 Scharen Jan 1995 A
5389863 Fluckiger Feb 1995 A
5392355 Khurana et al. Feb 1995 A
5394402 Ross Feb 1995 A
5406470 Ridley et al. Apr 1995 A
5436935 Bernhard et al. Jul 1995 A
5450231 Battig et al. Sep 1995 A
5463622 Keller et al. Oct 1995 A
5467344 Solomon et al. Nov 1995 A
5478993 Derksen Dec 1995 A
5493613 Denno et al. Feb 1996 A
5508840 Vogel et al. Apr 1996 A
5530763 Aebi et al. Jun 1996 A
5534851 Russek Jul 1996 A
5557653 Paterson et al. Sep 1996 A
5559992 Stutz et al. Sep 1996 A
5561412 Novak et al. Oct 1996 A
5568478 van Loo, Jr et al. Oct 1996 A
5570354 Simon Oct 1996 A
5586188 Renggli et al. Dec 1996 A
5594798 Cox et al. Jan 1997 A
5596638 Paterson et al. Jan 1997 A
5608762 Maddy Mar 1997 A
5611527 Wuthrich Mar 1997 A
5615230 Gunther et al. Mar 1997 A
5615995 Nobile et al. Apr 1997 A
5625839 Kohler et al. Apr 1997 A
5628258 Zwahlen et al. May 1997 A
5634000 Wicht May 1997 A
5673307 Holland et al. Sep 1997 A
5686391 Crudden Nov 1997 A
5687217 Bliss et al. Nov 1997 A
5689098 Gillieron Nov 1997 A
5699038 Ulrich et al. Dec 1997 A
5701193 Vogel et al. Dec 1997 A
5768272 Rao et al. Jun 1998 A
5778244 Putnins et al. Jul 1998 A
5787077 Kuehnel et al. Jul 1998 A
5794163 Paterson et al. Aug 1998 A
5805590 Gillard et al. Sep 1998 A
5805690 Koepper et al. Sep 1998 A
5809258 Bemanian et al. Sep 1998 A
5825779 Putnins et al. Oct 1998 A
5838223 Gallant et al. Nov 1998 A
5841246 Manders Nov 1998 A
5857087 Bemanian et al. Jan 1999 A
5859857 Martinson et al. Jan 1999 A
5867813 Di Pietro et al. Feb 1999 A
5877675 Rebstock et al. Mar 1999 A
5896511 Manning et al. Apr 1999 A
5898671 Hunt et al. Apr 1999 A
5903571 Koepper et al. May 1999 A
5907542 Kuehnel et al. May 1999 A
5920263 Huttenhoff Jul 1999 A
5926511 Fleischmann Jul 1999 A
5928376 Dettmar et al. Jul 1999 A
5942986 Shabot et al. Aug 1999 A
5942996 Scarangella et al. Aug 1999 A
5943020 Liebendoerfer et al. Aug 1999 A
5975273 Zwahlen et al. Nov 1999 A
5983260 Hauser et al. Nov 1999 A
5991298 Hunt et al. Nov 1999 A
5995572 Dettmar Nov 1999 A
5999846 Pardey et al. Dec 1999 A
6014384 Weberhofer Jan 2000 A
6025791 Tonks Feb 2000 A
6044158 Terpening et al. Mar 2000 A
6046918 Jitaru Apr 2000 A
6061256 Kolar May 2000 A
6104723 Martinson et al. Aug 2000 A
6141346 Caldara et al. Oct 2000 A
6147592 Ulrich et al. Nov 2000 A
6212384 Almgren et al. Apr 2001 B1
6240078 Kuhnel et al. May 2001 B1
6243844 Tonks Jun 2001 B1
6256674 Manning et al. Jul 2001 B1
6257389 Paping et al. Jul 2001 B1
6264020 Rufener et al. Jul 2001 B1
6272633 Duke et al. Aug 2001 B1
6315462 Anthamatten et al. Nov 2001 B1
6332100 Sahai et al. Dec 2001 B1
6345784 Shnaps Feb 2002 B1
6356638 Hardy et al. Mar 2002 B1
6356762 Guenther Mar 2002 B1
6362725 Ulrich et al. Mar 2002 B1
6373209 Gerber et al. Apr 2002 B1
6385444 Peschel et al. May 2002 B1
6415412 Tonks Jul 2002 B2
6426957 Hauser et al. Jul 2002 B1
6427133 Paping et al. Jul 2002 B1
6470033 Menzi et al. Oct 2002 B1
6474592 Shnaps Nov 2002 B1
6496499 Hamilton et al. Dec 2002 B1
6539025 Manning et al. Mar 2003 B1
6581841 Christoffersen Jun 2003 B1
6616140 Siegenthaler Sep 2003 B2
6618797 Dery et al. Sep 2003 B1
6628323 Wegmann Sep 2003 B1
6651041 Juric Nov 2003 B1
6700806 Kolar Mar 2004 B2
6754516 Mannheimer Jun 2004 B2
6755503 von Niederhausern et al. Jun 2004 B2
6768771 Costantini Jul 2004 B1
6771775 Widmer Aug 2004 B1
6782102 Blanchard et al. Aug 2004 B2
6804656 Rosenfeld et al. Oct 2004 B1
6862201 Hodge, Jr. Mar 2005 B2
6892083 Shostak May 2005 B2
6897780 Ulrich et al. May 2005 B2
6900824 Glaeser May 2005 B2
6901255 Shostak May 2005 B2
6928370 Anuzis et al. Aug 2005 B2
6944448 Bobst Sep 2005 B1
6952159 Müller Oct 2005 B1
6963650 Combest Nov 2005 B2
6967553 Jitaru Nov 2005 B2
7003278 Beni et al. Feb 2006 B2
7009850 Jitaru Mar 2006 B2
7012820 Jitaru Mar 2006 B2
7015699 Suntio Mar 2006 B1
7035622 Pappalardo et al. Apr 2006 B2
7035623 Pappalardo et al. Apr 2006 B2
7090053 Bothwell et al. Aug 2006 B2
7091817 Peck et al. Aug 2006 B2
7093823 Sevalie′ Aug 2006 B2
7123950 Mannheimer Oct 2006 B2
7130203 Mbaye Oct 2006 B2
7190802 Rains et al. Mar 2007 B2
7206594 Shostak Apr 2007 B2
7212815 Juric May 2007 B1
7215945 Pappalardo et al. May 2007 B2
7218710 Ali et al. May 2007 B1
7224281 Santoso et al. May 2007 B2
7225408 O'Rourke May 2007 B2
7242308 Ulrich et al. Jul 2007 B2
7248881 Shostak Jul 2007 B2
7249036 Bayne Jul 2007 B2
7256708 Rosenfeld et al. Aug 2007 B2
7257415 Shostak Aug 2007 B2
7263669 Denholm Aug 2007 B2
7286472 Wu Oct 2007 B2
7295094 Jitaru et al. Nov 2007 B2
7301451 Hastings Nov 2007 B2
7307543 Rosenfeld et al. Dec 2007 B2
7308718 Brookner Dec 2007 B1
7310541 Shostak Dec 2007 B2
7315825 Rosenfeld et al. Jan 2008 B2
7319386 Collins, Jr. et al. Jan 2008 B2
7321862 Rosenfeld et al. Jan 2008 B2
7379405 Chang May 2008 B2
7408793 Jitaru et al. Aug 2008 B2
7428189 Hubicki Sep 2008 B2
7430692 White, III et al. Sep 2008 B2
7436311 Rapaport et al. Oct 2008 B2
7450402 Jitaru Nov 2008 B2
7454359 Rosenfeld et al. Nov 2008 B2
7457751 Shostak Nov 2008 B2
7471685 Wu Dec 2008 B2
7475019 Rosenfeld et al. Jan 2009 B2
7538659 Ulrich et al. May 2009 B2
7542759 Edward et al. Jun 2009 B2
7545786 Krahn et al. Jun 2009 B2
7558082 Jitaru Jul 2009 B2
7571317 Vilhuber Aug 2009 B1
7616616 Amann et al. Nov 2009 B2
7657849 Chaudhri et al. Feb 2010 B2
7675190 Müller et al. Mar 2010 B1
7716491 Brookner et al. May 2010 B2
7737827 Perkins et al. Jun 2010 B2
7746218 Collins, Jr. et al. Jun 2010 B2
7747021 Lindteigen et al. Jun 2010 B2
7756728 Maughan et al. Jul 2010 B2
7764518 Jitaru Jul 2010 B2
7764972 Shostak Jul 2010 B2
7769054 Hamilton Aug 2010 B2
7769598 Denholm Aug 2010 B2
7769694 Schwartz et al. Aug 2010 B2
7813744 Johnson Oct 2010 B2
7818263 Schwartz et al. Oct 2010 B2
7822017 D'Souza et al. Oct 2010 B2
7848270 Hilmersson Dec 2010 B2
7852831 Akbar Dec 2010 B2
7853537 Moy et al. Dec 2010 B2
7904312 Denholm Mar 2011 B2
7916871 Brookner et al. Mar 2011 B2
7953070 Agarwal et al. May 2011 B1
7953447 Shostak May 2011 B2
7958201 Lindsay Jun 2011 B2
7978619 Nielsen Jul 2011 B2
7981032 Santoso et al. Jul 2011 B2
8015030 Brown Sep 2011 B2
8046721 Chaudhri et al. Oct 2011 B2
8092380 Rothman et al. Jan 2012 B2
8098806 Shostak Jan 2012 B2
8100829 Rothman et al. Jan 2012 B2
8112278 Burke Feb 2012 B2
8115640 Walls Feb 2012 B2
8121649 Shostak Feb 2012 B2
8122006 de Castro Alves et al. Feb 2012 B2
8131259 Haynes et al. Mar 2012 B2
8160895 Schmitt et al. Apr 2012 B2
8165893 Goldberg et al. Apr 2012 B1
8170887 Rosenfeld et al. May 2012 B2
8175887 Shostak May 2012 B2
8175895 Rosenfeld et al. May 2012 B2
8183987 Traughber et al. May 2012 B2
8223715 Hamilton et al. Jul 2012 B2
8250483 Blomquist Aug 2012 B2
8255238 Powell et al. Aug 2012 B2
8283814 Liao Oct 2012 B2
8286171 More et al. Oct 2012 B2
8332017 Tarassenko et al. Dec 2012 B2
8346572 Eaton, Jr. et al. Jan 2013 B2
8355925 Rothman et al. Jan 2013 B2
8374988 Gawlick Feb 2013 B2
8401606 Mannheimer Mar 2013 B2
8401607 Mannheimer Mar 2013 B2
8403847 Rothman et al. Mar 2013 B2
8406456 More Mar 2013 B2
8416085 Gawlick Apr 2013 B2
8417233 Woloshyn Apr 2013 B2
8417662 Gawlick Apr 2013 B2
8451101 Somasundaram et al. May 2013 B2
8454506 Rothman et al. Jun 2013 B2
8467536 Lewis et al. Jun 2013 B2
8478695 Simcik et al. Jul 2013 B2
8494868 Saalsaa Jul 2013 B2
8498865 Shostak Jul 2013 B1
8503621 Patel et al. Aug 2013 B2
8525687 Tran Sep 2013 B2
8543066 Marklund et al. Sep 2013 B2
8543534 Alves et al. Sep 2013 B2
8612248 Denholm Dec 2013 B2
8615291 Moorman et al. Dec 2013 B2
8618927 Wohlert Dec 2013 B2
8619610 Simha et al. Dec 2013 B2
8620020 More Dec 2013 B2
8626246 Shostak Jan 2014 B2
8681989 Park et al. Mar 2014 B2
8708903 Tran Apr 2014 B2
8737209 Ivanov et al. May 2014 B2
8756528 Cristofoli Jun 2014 B2
8775196 Simpson et al. Jul 2014 B2
8825508 Nilsson Sep 2014 B2
8838196 Mannheimer Sep 2014 B2
8842001 Gilham et al. Sep 2014 B2
8849718 Dala et al. Sep 2014 B2
8856729 Moore et al. Oct 2014 B2
8886663 Gainsboro et al. Nov 2014 B2
8886792 Biondi et al. Nov 2014 B2
8890656 Pendse Nov 2014 B2
8918304 Le et al. Dec 2014 B2
8933820 Tyson et al. Jan 2015 B1
8942671 Haynes et al. Jan 2015 B2
8948734 Vaglio et al. Feb 2015 B2
8949738 Felt Feb 2015 B2
8977548 Shostak Mar 2015 B2
9019099 Fox et al. Apr 2015 B2
9020476 Leipzig et al. Apr 2015 B2
9020547 Amann et al. Apr 2015 B2
9052809 Vesto Jun 2015 B2
9058741 Steinhauer et al. Jun 2015 B2
9059971 Graham et al. Jun 2015 B2
9098604 Treacy Aug 2015 B2
9098696 Johnson et al. Aug 2015 B2
9124386 Dadu et al. Sep 2015 B2
9129501 King et al. Sep 2015 B1
9137267 Patel et al. Sep 2015 B2
9137405 Eschbach et al. Sep 2015 B2
9159313 Saeki et al. Oct 2015 B2
9166977 Desai et al. Oct 2015 B2
9167445 Hedlund et al. Oct 2015 B2
9185202 Herbst et al. Nov 2015 B2
9185578 Hedlund et al. Nov 2015 B2
9185579 Hedlund et al. Nov 2015 B2
9215583 Shostak Dec 2015 B2
9218454 Kiani et al. Dec 2015 B2
9241066 Wong et al. Jan 2016 B2
9246991 Moore et al. Jan 2016 B2
9258143 Chavez Feb 2016 B2
9280637 Vaglio et al. Mar 2016 B2
9305450 Halverson et al. Apr 2016 B2
9355214 Wilson et al. May 2016 B2
9361769 Taughber et al. Jun 2016 B2
9400874 Powell et al. Jul 2016 B2
9432072 Karlsson Aug 2016 B2
9449355 Kozicki et al. Sep 2016 B2
9492341 Huster et al. Nov 2016 B2
9521552 Adrangi et al. Dec 2016 B2
9524569 Moore et al. Dec 2016 B2
9582978 Herbst et al. Feb 2017 B2
9585565 Carnes Mar 2017 B2
9621348 Bahjat Apr 2017 B2
9626479 Zaleski Apr 2017 B2
9633088 Nagy et al. Apr 2017 B1
9637133 McCusker May 2017 B1
9649073 King et al. May 2017 B2
9654448 Cummings et al. May 2017 B2
9659482 Yang May 2017 B2
9667491 Piekarski et al. May 2017 B2
9706966 Colman et al. Jul 2017 B2
9722775 Hjelm et al. Aug 2017 B2
9734301 King et al. Aug 2017 B2
9747778 Mukherji et al. Aug 2017 B2
9749825 Payne et al. Aug 2017 B2
9750872 De La Huerga Sep 2017 B2
9779209 Greer Oct 2017 B2
9805573 Herbst et al. Oct 2017 B2
9817809 Shostak Nov 2017 B2
9819651 Mahler Nov 2017 B2
9824312 Fletcher et al. Nov 2017 B2
9830801 Rusin et al. Nov 2017 B2
9833194 Hayes et al. Dec 2017 B2
9836940 Herbst et al. Dec 2017 B2
9838062 Larsen Dec 2017 B2
9872148 King et al. Jan 2018 B2
9881475 Herbst et al. Jan 2018 B2
9911300 Herbst et al. Mar 2018 B2
9916420 Cardoza et al. Mar 2018 B2
9924908 Hubert et al. Mar 2018 B2
9928379 Hoffer Mar 2018 B1
9946711 Reiter et al. Apr 2018 B2
9946984 Ahari et al. Apr 2018 B2
9990827 Vaddepally Jun 2018 B2
9996667 Moore et al. Jun 2018 B2
10037411 Bala et al. Jul 2018 B2
10042979 Moore et al. Aug 2018 B2
10068057 Moore Sep 2018 B2
10078875 Powell et al. Sep 2018 B2
10098593 Collins, Jr. et al. Oct 2018 B2
10115171 Portnoy Oct 2018 B2
10121346 Herbst et al. Nov 2018 B2
10232139 Hang Mar 2019 B1
10957445 Faulks et al. Mar 2021 B2
20010014161 Baiker et al. Aug 2001 A1
20010029489 Brookner et al. Oct 2001 A1
20010031650 Baiker et al. Oct 2001 A1
20010047278 Brookner et al. Nov 2001 A1
20020007316 Frank Jan 2002 A1
20020010640 Dutta et al. Jan 2002 A1
20020040282 Bailey et al. Apr 2002 A1
20020060164 LeMoine et al. May 2002 A1
20020070258 LeMoine et al. Jun 2002 A1
20020077991 Heimann et al. Jun 2002 A1
20020083019 Bystrak et al. Jun 2002 A1
20020083023 Rosenkranz et al. Jun 2002 A1
20020126310 Hersberger et al. Sep 2002 A1
20020128986 Stutz Sep 2002 A1
20020133471 Eskandari et al. Sep 2002 A1
20020140162 Gasser et al. Oct 2002 A1
20020143713 Stutz Oct 2002 A1
20020169728 Moy et al. Nov 2002 A1
20020178130 Moy et al. Nov 2002 A1
20020191585 Wu Dec 2002 A1
20020193132 Wu Dec 2002 A1
20030004900 Schwartz et al. Jan 2003 A1
20030029294 Lay et al. Feb 2003 A1
20030074324 Kresina et al. Apr 2003 A1
20030097337 Brookner et al. May 2003 A1
20030191730 Adkins et al. Oct 2003 A1
20040043797 Shostak Mar 2004 A1
20040073453 Nenov et al. Apr 2004 A1
20040082454 White et al. Apr 2004 A1
20040107163 Dutta et al. Jun 2004 A1
20050023409 Shnaps et al. Feb 2005 A1
20050065817 Mihai et al. Mar 2005 A1
20050077357 Roux Apr 2005 A1
20050122682 Streit et al. Jun 2005 A1
20050124350 Wu Jun 2005 A1
20050146431 Hastings et al. Jul 2005 A1
20050165321 Fischell Jul 2005 A1
20060016881 Roux Jan 2006 A1
20060091204 Gal May 2006 A1
20060094439 Christian May 2006 A1
20060097033 Le Gal May 2006 A1
20060157567 Baumann et al. Jul 2006 A1
20060168259 Spilotro et al. Jul 2006 A1
20060187868 Pearce et al. Aug 2006 A1
20070004971 Riley et al. Jan 2007 A1
20070033074 Nitzan Feb 2007 A1
20070142076 Sjostedt Jun 2007 A1
20070150726 Sinnreich et al. Jun 2007 A1
20070210917 Collins, Jr. et al. Sep 2007 A1
20070239488 DeRosso Oct 2007 A1
20070257577 Bizjak Nov 2007 A1
20070271606 Amann et al. Nov 2007 A1
20070281748 Piekarski Dec 2007 A1
20070298782 Wu Dec 2007 A1
20080004499 Davis Jan 2008 A1
20080039071 Pearce et al. Feb 2008 A1
20080096506 Nguyen et al. Apr 2008 A1
20080125080 Phillips May 2008 A1
20080153509 Piekarski Jun 2008 A1
20080183814 Sanghavi Jul 2008 A1
20080201429 Barbell et al. Aug 2008 A1
20090113933 Hatem May 2009 A1
20090212925 Schuman, Sr. et al. Aug 2009 A1
20090212926 Du et al. Aug 2009 A1
20090212956 Schuman Aug 2009 A1
20090214009 Schuman, Sr. et al. Aug 2009 A1
20090217080 Ferguson et al. Aug 2009 A1
20100001838 Miodownik et al. Jan 2010 A1
20100058409 Chapman et al. Mar 2010 A1
20100137693 Porras et al. Jun 2010 A1
20100223071 Kland et al. Sep 2010 A1
20100235782 Powell et al. Sep 2010 A1
20110054924 Mitchell et al. Mar 2011 A1
20110054946 Coulter et al. Mar 2011 A1
20110246235 Powell et al. Oct 2011 A1
20110295621 Farooq et al. Dec 2011 A1
20110302408 McDermott et al. Dec 2011 A1
20110302957 Hatem Dec 2011 A1
20120075674 Sweeney Mar 2012 A1
20120095779 Wengrovitz Apr 2012 A1
20120101847 Johnson et al. Apr 2012 A1
20120169467 Condra Jul 2012 A1
20120194520 Nordfelth et al. Aug 2012 A1
20120208522 Marklund et al. Aug 2012 A1
20120209649 Ovenden et al. Aug 2012 A1
20120284040 Dupin Nov 2012 A1
20130014058 Scothern Jan 2013 A1
20130015967 Nagathil Jan 2013 A1
20130074198 More et al. Mar 2013 A1
20130085765 Tuchinda et al. Apr 2013 A1
20130085798 Spatola et al. Apr 2013 A1
20130096953 Beverly et al. Apr 2013 A1
20130103768 Freebeck Apr 2013 A1
20130183923 Brackett et al. Jul 2013 A1
20130271469 Moore et al. Oct 2013 A1
20130275145 Moore et al. Oct 2013 A1
20130275151 Moore et al. Oct 2013 A1
20130275152 Moore et al. Oct 2013 A1
20140019901 Powell et al. Jan 2014 A1
20140039351 Mix et al. Feb 2014 A1
20140051399 Walker et al. Feb 2014 A1
20140056143 Hedlund et al. Feb 2014 A1
20140056157 Hedlund et al. Feb 2014 A1
20140056159 Hedlund et al. Feb 2014 A1
20140056234 Hedlund et al. Feb 2014 A1
20140070939 Halverson et al. Mar 2014 A1
20140097961 Vaglio Apr 2014 A1
20140100873 Vaglio et al. Apr 2014 A1
20140129255 Woodson et al. May 2014 A1
20140142963 Hill May 2014 A1
20140172996 Deeter et al. Jun 2014 A1
20140184408 Herbst Jul 2014 A1
20140222450 Gray et al. Aug 2014 A1
20140249854 Moore et al. Sep 2014 A1
20140249855 Moore Sep 2014 A1
20140249857 Moore Sep 2014 A1
20140278486 Moore et al. Sep 2014 A1
20140278488 Moore Sep 2014 A1
20140358585 Reiner Dec 2014 A1
20150025329 Amarasingham et al. Jan 2015 A1
20150081339 Vaglio et al. Mar 2015 A1
20150088549 Moore et al. Mar 2015 A1
20150106121 Muhsin Apr 2015 A1
20150137968 Rusin May 2015 A1
20150148617 Friedman May 2015 A1
20150180663 Kang et al. Jun 2015 A1
20150205919 Robertson et al. Jul 2015 A1
20150269503 Ahari et al. Sep 2015 A1
20150302539 Mazar Oct 2015 A1
20160014099 Fishkov Jan 2016 A1
20160027289 Hargis Jan 2016 A1
20160044505 Nishi et al. Feb 2016 A1
20160055299 Yarnell Feb 2016 A1
20160110040 Vaglio et al. Apr 2016 A1
20160173503 Knight et al. Jun 2016 A1
20160180325 Davis Jun 2016 A1
20160180681 Halverson et al. Jun 2016 A1
20160267236 Traughber et al. Sep 2016 A1
20160284202 Traughber et al. Sep 2016 A1
20160315898 Kaplan Oct 2016 A1
20160360160 Eizenberg Dec 2016 A1
20170004273 Mbanefo Jan 2017 A1
20170024091 Hosier, Jr. Jan 2017 A1
20170027787 Huster et al. Feb 2017 A1
20170032093 Norton et al. Feb 2017 A1
20170039839 Halverson Feb 2017 A1
20170048323 Schlapfer et al. Feb 2017 A1
20170098037 Agassi et al. Apr 2017 A1
20170109018 Vaglio et al. Apr 2017 A1
20170116385 Lauderdale et al. Apr 2017 A1
20170139485 Fogelmark et al. May 2017 A1
20170199973 Walton et al. Jul 2017 A1
20170214701 Hasan Jul 2017 A1
20170228682 Nilsson et al. Aug 2017 A1
20170238172 Benoit et al. Aug 2017 A1
20170249435 Lancelot Aug 2017 A1
20170265819 Colman et al. Sep 2017 A1
20170287300 Herbst Oct 2017 A1
20170308650 Brill et al. Oct 2017 A1
20170329919 Govro Nov 2017 A1
20170343355 Tengfjord et al. Nov 2017 A1
20170372219 Crawford et al. Dec 2017 A1
20180102036 Herbst et al. Apr 2018 A1
20180125414 Lafleche et al. May 2018 A1
20180144814 Bright May 2018 A1
20180153455 Guazzi et al. Jun 2018 A1
20180261133 Hamada et al. Sep 2018 A1
20180295186 Schlapfer et al. Oct 2018 A1
20180351745 Hamada et al. Dec 2018 A1
20190108908 Faulks Apr 2019 A1
20200099646 Kaplan Mar 2020 A1
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number Date Country
2660744 Nov 2013 WO
Non-Patent Literature Citations (6)
Entry
Voalté Me for iPhone™ In a Heartbeat v2.x-2012; © Voalte, Inc.; 10 pages.
Voalté One for iPhone™ User Manual v2.0; 2012; © Voalte, Inc.; 50 pages.
Voalté One User Manual v1.x; 2009; For use with Version 1.4; 46 pages.
User Manual Ascom i75 VoWiFi Handset; Td 92319GB; Nov. 10, 2008/Ver. D; 67 pages.
“A Model for Presence and Instant Messaging,” Network Working Group, Request for Comments: 2778, Category: Informational; Day et al.; Feb. 2000; © The Internet Society (2000); 17 pages.
Extended European Search Report for European Patent Application No. 18198845.2, dated Feb. 18, 2019; 8 pages.
Related Publications (1)
Number Date Country
20210174948 A1 Jun 2021 US
Provisional Applications (2)
Number Date Country
62660576 Apr 2018 US
62568671 Oct 2017 US
Continuations (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 16143971 Sep 2018 US
Child 17176234 US