The present invention relates generally to devices that hold medications such as pills and the like, and more particularly to a pill box that can keep track of pill weights to track taking of medications.
There is considerable prior art related to devices that improve the pillbox. However, none of these provide a scale that provides weight information integrated into a conventional pill holder that allows easy delivery of pills and monitoring of pill consumption without requiring the user to perform onerous additional steps, or to operate a more complex or failure prone system. It would be advantageous to have a device that aides the user and/or caregiver in performing the existing pill consumption procedure and makes the process more failure resistant without adding additional complication to the user experience.
The present invention relates to a pillbox with a basic weighing scale that provides an easy, accurate and robust mechanism to monitor the removal of pills using weight, without modifying the behavior of patients. When connected to a small, inexpensive computing device and clock/timing device, it can easily record the removal of pills. With the addition of a light, such as an LED, or a display, it can provide a visual notification as a reminder to take pills, as well as when pills were last taken. With the addition of a loudspeaker or other sound-generator, the notification can be audible with a variety of notification sounds or alarms that designate time pills should be taken. It can also notify patients and/or caregivers when removal is outside of a prescribed window. If the computing device is connected to the Internet and/or a remote computing device, remote notifications can be provided for the use of caregivers and/or health care providers.
It is an object of the invention to provide a pillbox with a fail safe mechanism that functions as a normal pillbox or jar/tray even if the electronics fail.
It is also an object of the present invention to assist the user and caregiver in the normal process of preparing and taking pills, and to not require them to undergo new, additional processes.
Attention is now directed to several drawings the illustrate features of the present invention.
Several figures and illustrations have been provided to aid in understanding the present invention. The scope of the present invention is not limited to what is shown in the figures.
The First Embodiment of the present invention is shown in
There are a variety of mechanisms that can be implemented to allow the tray to accurately gain information about the weight of individual pills. One mechanism is that the patient or caregiver is prompted through a guided calibration process upon the placement of a new pill jar into a receptacle. Such a process could be guided either visually with the use of a display either on the device itself or on a remote device such as a tablet, PC or smartphone. Such a process can also be guided by voice prompts if the device does not have a display, or if the patient or caregiver is visually impaired. Such a process can be initiated either because the user initiated the process, or because the device detects a new jar has been inserted into a receptacle. The device can detect the weight of a jar where one had not been previously, or that pills had been added to a pre-existing jar by detecting an increase in the weight of a jar, or that a partially or completely depleted jar had been replaced by a new jar. In the case of a new jar, the weight is recorded, and the user is prompted to remove a single pill, or multiple pills, from the jar and then replace the jar in the receptacle. The computing device can take the difference between the two weight measurements thereby arriving at the weight of the pill. Additionally, the user can be prompted for additional information such as the type of pills, which can be used to corroborate the weight of the pill. Alternatively, the user can be prompted to remove a second or multiple pills as a means to corroborate the accurate weight of the pill.
The monitoring of each jar is typically implemented by dedicating a receptacle to each jar of pills. The use of a label for each receptacle designating a medication is useful for this purpose. The embodiment shown in
Once the pill jar and pill weight is established by one of the above procedures for each receptacle and jar, the tray can monitor the removal of each pill/dosage. In the case of liquids, powdered medicine or supplements, rather than measuring the discrete number of pills, the tray can record the dosage in weight taken at a given time. The scale allows the distinction between the removal of a pill from a jar and the mere removal and replacement of a jar from the pill tray (as for example for the user to review the dosage instructions or to count the number of pills remaining.)
Removal of a pill jar can trigger an audible or visual prompt designating the dosage and last time that jar's contents was taken, for example “two pills taken at 2:37 pm May 3” which would provide an automatic way to gain information on pill consumption.
The invention can store a record of the time and date a pill or set of pills is consumed and can also upload that information to a remote computing device, which allows caregivers or medical practitioners access to this information. It may be desirable that in some cases, real time alerts be provided to caregivers if pill consumption falls outside of an acceptable window depending on the importance and sensitivity of a given medication. Such alerts can take the form of a smartphone notification, text message or automated phone call.
It should be appreciated that a single scale can be used to measure all the receptacles simultaneously instead of a scale dedicated to each individual receptacle. However dedicated scales for each cavity may be preferred in cases where it is desired to support certain use cases, for example, where multiple receptacles may be removed at once.
It is also useful to have a beveled edge at the top of the cavity to ensure the pill jar/lid can not get caught on the edge and affect the measurement of the receptacle. Also the upper edge of receptacle should be low enough such that the receptacle is accessible to allow easy access to the top of the jar for removal.
In a second embodiment shown in
To fill the pillbox of this embodiment, the user places the pillbox in the horizontal position as shown in
There are at least two possible implementations of a guided filling procedure for the present invention. In the first, the device does not have pre-existing information about the weight of the pills such as a database of known pill weights. In this case, the following pill filling procedure can be followed:
If the above app. is enabled, for example, with a database of medications with weights associated with each of the medications, then the invention can check the weight incremented in each receptacle against that database and determine if the weight increment was within the known weight range (accounting for manufacturing and other variances) for that medication (and dosage). If it is correct, then the “correct” designation can be initiated, if it was not, then the “incorrect” designation can be initiated.
It should be appreciated that a variety of techniques can be used to establish the correct weight of pills, including the participation of the pharmacist, or medical practitioner in the process.
An additional benefit of this embodiment is that because of its vertical orientation, the user may be assisted by gravity in the removal of pills. The cavity lid in this embodiment can have a scoop-like shape with raised edges which captures pills that roll or slide out of the cavity. Although the lid may have raised edges which prevent the pills from accidentally sliding out of the lid and onto the table or floor, it is nonetheless significantly more shallow than the main cavity, thereby allowing easier access to the pills than by reaching into the cavity directly as is the case of a conventionally oriented horizontal pillbox.
A third embodiment is shown in
A detachable set of receptacles 21 is an enclosure with a lid and body for containing a set of pills, and carried in a pocket or bag. The receptacle can have a marking that designates its reoccurring time of intended consumption, such as “Friday Morning” or the like. Such a set may have a plurality of individual receptacles either connected to each other or individual as shown in. In either case, each receptacle holds a set of pills intended to be consumed at a given time period. In the case of a 21 segment, 7 day set of receptacles, a designation might be “mid day, Friday,”; in the case of a 7 segment, 7 day set of receptacles, the designation could be “Friday.” As in the second embodiment, the user is prompted to fill the receptacles based on the intended timing of pill consumption (ie a pill is intended to be taken at midday everyday and therefore is placed in the 7 middle receptacles of a 21 receptacle set)
These smaller, lighter receptacles allow the user to take the pills away from the base station and their home for additional portability. Such receptacles can be disposable while still maintaining the benefit of assisted and monitored filling. While precise monitoring of pill consumption is not be possible if the pills are consumed with the receptacles removed from the base station, the base station can nonetheless monitor time of removal and replacement of the receptacles, thereby providing a known window of time when the pills were consumed.
A remote computer can work in conjunction with the receptacles and base station to provide notifications to the user or caregiver regarding pill consumptions. For example, the patient can receive a smartphone alert reminding them to consume the contents of “mid day, Friday's” contents.
A fourth embodiment is shown in
As in the third embodiment, a remote computer can provide notification reminders to take a particular cavity's contents, also by virtue of its embedded timer and processor, such a detachable receptacle can also contain a notification mechanism such as a light and or loudspeaker which can notify users at the time to consume their medication
The invention of fourth embodiment typically requires a force sensing element in the receptacle itself. On the bottom of the receptacle are a set of feet, and the user is guided to place the receptacle on a flat, even surface. After the user takes some quantity of the pills and closes the receptacle, the user then places the receptacle on a stable, flat even surface. The weight sensing device in the receptacle, takes a measurement of the weight of the receptacle, and finding a stable measurement equal to or greater than the weight of the empty receptacle, and less than or equal to the weight of the full receptacle, records the new weight and time. Each time the receptacle is opened, this procedure is repeated. The receptacle can provide a “correct” designation feedback if the weight measurement is consistent with expected pills being removed.
In all of the embodiments of the present invention disclosed herein, a series of prompts can assist the user in consuming their pills, such prompts include audio prompts as well as visual prompts. Such visual or audio prompts can come from the pillbox itself. For example, the appropriate cavity can be illuminated at the appropriate time to instruct the user to consume the pills in that cavity. Alternately, the alerts can come from the remote computer (for example an app. on a smartphone) which can notify the user which pill should be consumed from which cavity at that time). In addition, remote notifications can be sent to other remote computing devices if, for example, pill consumption falls outside of a designated window of compliance and a caregiver should be alerted to a potential danger for the patient
It is desirable to have a visual or audio signal designating the range of allowable pill consumption relative to the current time. One possible designation is a visual indicator showing “not yet time to take” “ready” and “overdue” as appropriate. It should be appreciated that such an indication can take a variety of forms such as a variety of visual or audio indications.
It should be noted that in those embodiments that require an application (app.), the app includes stored computer instructions that execute on a processor and are stored in at least one memory device. The processor can be in a smartphone, a tablet, a computer, or any other type of device including, in some cases, in the pillbox itself. Communication between the pillbox and an external device can be wireless using any wireless technology including, but not limited to, WiFi, Bluetooth™, Zigbee, cellular telephone or any other wireless or wired communication technique. The device running the app. can have a touchscreen, speaker, earphones, keypad (real or virtual) and all other interface components known in the art.
Several descriptions and illustrations have been presented to aid in understanding the present invention. One with skill in the art will realize that numerous changes and variations may be made without departing from the spirit of the invention. Each of these changes and variations is within the scope of the present invention.
This application is related to, and claims priority to, U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/345,187 filed Jun. 3, 2016. Application 62/345,187 is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62345187 | Jun 2016 | US |