This application is a 371 of PCT/CH03/00099, filed Feb. 8, 2003, which claims priority to PCT/CH02/00435, filed Aug. 8, 2002.
Device for rescue and safety for swimming pools and leisure parks intended to prevent drowning, to remove a person from the water who is in difficulties due to drowning or having fallen in the water with or without human intervention thanks to a water detector, a cardiac-arrest detector and, where it exists, mainly thanks to the help of an inflatable grid described in document WO 01/06076 A1, and/or the engagement of any other rescue and self-protection device capable of alerting rescuers.
This is a new concept, a device consisting of elements to be used depending on the type of environment and making it possible to establish degrees of selection of implementation of means of ensuring safety.
The background for the technique mentions document WO 9718542, which offers a supervision system for public swimming pools.
This document displays numerous disadvantages. The device suggests the supervision of the bottom of public pools, analysing movements when, after a period of 15 seconds of quasi-immobility only an alarm is activated. This device is intended solely for public swimming pools. It only acts as an aid to supervision. It is not autonomous because human intervention remains necessary for recovering a person in difficulties. A lifeguard needs to supervise the swimming pool and a lifesaver must dive to the bottom of the pool in order to find the person, bring her/him to the surface and get her/him out of the water—a delicate operation that takes a considerable amount of time.
If the pool is full of swimmers, it is not easy to dive into the swirling waters among people who are larking about, to find someone on the bottom at a particular spot.
Document U.S. Pat. No. 4,063,410 proposes wristband with a transmitter, but which has the following disadvantages: the cardiac pulse detector is a device on the outside the wristband, it is not an integral part of an automatic rescue device worn by the person. It is not a receiver and cannot receive a broadcast field signal indicating presence. The cardiac pulse detector operates as a device fitted to the wristband, but this option is not incorporated into the wristband. Probes are not included in the wristband, making the wristband unusable in a pool because probes with external wires and a connector are not suitable for use in the water.
Document WO 01/06076 A1 presents a device in the form of an inflatable grid which makes it possible to bring back to the surface a person swimming in the pool and any person in difficulties and all this within a record time, although someone needs to intervene in order to trigger the device, and control of the inflation/deflation process is not covered.
The present invention suggests removing these main disadvantages by reducing the time taken for intervention, either by means of a cardiac-arrest detector, a panic button, location of the person in difficulties and intervention of the lifeguard who will go and find the person, or the cardiac-arrest detector will be attached to an automatic rescue device such as an inflatable grid, for example, as described below.
The inflatable grid consists of a complete device adapted to private swimming pools and public pools that is capable of operating autonomously without human intervention to prevent falls, to bring the person back to the surface and remove people from the water, where the grid can be inflated and deflated in cases of emergency and non-emergency, pinpoint accidents that may occur beside a swimming pool or in a leisure park or ski resort.
Safety in public pools, safety begins with the fact that as each bather arrives she/he puts on her/his wrist a wristband containing a cardiac-arrest detector and a panic button. The wristband is equipped with a means of display including a symbol indicating that it is in working order when the heartbeat is detected.
The device continues to ensure safety by preventing access to the pool to anyone not wearing the wristband, and if removed, the wristband will emit an alarm signal inviting the bather to don or re-don her/his wristband.
Where public pools are equipped with the device described in document WO 01/06076 A1 and thus equipped with an inflatable grid, a location device attached to the grid and in the environment, a panic button and a cardiac-arrest detector will make it possible, through the lifeguard, to activate the uplifting of the grid which will set off an alarm.
As soon as a distress signal emitted from the cardiac-arrest detector or the panic button is detected, the alarm is transmitted to the lifeguard who will decide to activate the grid. At that moment, the device will transmit data collected by the wristband to a central receiving station where it will be displayed and/or printed, while the data will be transmitted to a first aid station, a cancellation code being provided to deal with false alarms. Alternatively, the lifeguard may decide to validate the alarm and warn the first aid station.
If the pool does not have an inflatable grid, the location device would be placed on the bottom, walls and/or beside the pool or in the surrounding area. A lifeguard or other person in the vicinity may use the panic button and trigger an alarm, the position of the problem will be displayed on monitors that will indicate the time and date of receipt of the data, the lifeguard will dive in to find the person or will rush the first aid people to the scene of the accident in leisure parks or ski resorts.
The surveillance monitor or monitors may be situated inside a building, be portable and worn on the belt of supervisors and, if desired, may enable supervisors to communicate with each other.
For Swimming Pools
Safety in private pools begins with the wearing of the wristband by young people, the elderly and pets. It will be programmed to act as a water detector, in the case of an accidental fall into the pool and if the pool is equipped with the inflatable grid, this will be activated and will rise to the surface with the alarm. When the children are bathing, the parents will deactivate the water detector and the cardiac-arrest detector comes into use. In the case of drowning by par immersion syncope, the grid will automatically rise to the surface. Where a person is feeling unwell, the child or other person will press her/his own wristband and the grid will rise to the surface. If a person is alone in the pool and begins to suffocate, to choke, she/he will grip her/his wristband and the grid will rise to the surface.
Where there is no protective grid, the water detector, if activated, or the cardiac-arrest detector, will trigger an alarm indicating that someone has fallen into the pool.
To summarise, in a private pool the device offers three means of safety: by pressing the panic button, by detecting cardiac arrest, and by accidentally falling in (water detector). The water detector function can be activated or deactivated, as required.
At the edge of the pool, for example, there would be a command post with an alarm that would transmit through wires or wirelessly, the data to a first aid station. A cancellation code is included for false alarms and the command post would be capable of being connected to a series of telephone numbers in order to warn the various people closest to the scene who could help.
Panic Button
The panic button is placed in a cavity on the wristband and is covered with a membrane to render it watertight.
Differentiation Between the Wristband being Accidentally hit and an Alarm
When the panic button is pressed to sound the alarm, everyone's reflex is to make sure that the alarm has been raised, so the person will apply longer pressure than if the button is pressed by accident, or the button may be pressed repeatedly or the wrist gripped.
It is thus possible to distinguish initially by the length of the alarm and to recognise alarms that are genuine (If there is a serious practical joker, she or he can be fined).
Contact Button
The surface of the wristband in contact with the wrist is fitted with a push-button which is pushed in when the wristband is closed, activating the pulse detector and when it is operational a lamp lights up, either flashing or constant, and it may either be a LED or a digital display.
Pulse and Cardiac-Arrest Detector
Basic principle: light is emitted, in whatever manner, and the variations thereof are measured. A light sensor is used to measure light passing through human tissue.
Solution a: The light source, an emitter diode, is doubled, the double being positioned opposite to the first so as to ensure that the light passes through human tissue and its reflection is captured by the light sensor, the receptor photodiode. There is a diode beneath the container that is in contact with the wrist and one inside the wristband, under the wrist with the light sensor.
Solution b: It is possible to have two separate receivers, one to sense the reflected signal and one to capture the signal passing through the wrist.
Solution c: Depending on quality of the cardiac pulse detector, this device is installed on either side of the wrist since the movements will interfere with the cardiac pulses and will intermittently interrupt the reading.
Solution d: is to have a diode on the upper side of the wrist, with a reference diode underneath the wrist, which would be placed between two light sensors that would collect the beams from each of the diodes.
Programme on a Loop to Identify Cardiac Arrest
After an initialisation sequence, contact with the wrist and detection of the first pulses, as soon as correct pulse detection is established, the wristband will begin to record pulse measurements in a loop.
Simultaneously, a fault meter will be created and will program the maximum amount of time that the absence of a pulse should be tolerated.
When the panic button is pressed by the bather, the panic button can be triggered in two ways:
If the panic button is pressed in either of the ways described above, an alarm code, 2 for example, is transmitted via FM waves to the lifeguard station.
In normal working, the pulse sensor is read by reading the status of the sensor as well as the number of pulses.
If there are no pulses or the sensor does not detect a pulse, the fault meter is brought into play. This meter reading is compared to one that represents a certain number of times per second. If the meter exceeds the maximum amount of time (which means that the loop has been run through several times consecutively and the result has been an absence of pulse each time, i.e. a cardiac arrest) the alarm code changes to 1, then this code is transmitted by FM frequency to the control post.
If the alarm meter does not reach the time limit, nothing happens and the test loop starts again by detecting the panic button.
If the pulse sensor sends correct pulse data before the fault counter reaches the time limit, the meter will be reset to start again. This makes it possible to be pre-armed against errors in reading the pulses during movements or any other sources of interference and prevents the triggering of an alarm except when X consecutive seconds has not produced any further number of pulses.
Access and Exit, Anti-Theft, Failure to Wear the Wristband
Solution a): Access and exit from the activity areas will be via an automatic gate or entry passage fitted with an infrared human presence detectors and a transponder detector which will immediately detect a person entering who is not wearing the wristband by detecting the absence of the transponder. This will trigger an alarm in the form of a revolving flashing light. In addition to the alarm, the automatic gate at the end of the lobby will close or remain closed, thus preventing access to the activities if the wristband is not being worn, and the same applies to the exit procedure.
Solution b): the infrared detector can be replaced by an optical barrier.
Solution c): A presence-detecting pressure mat or strip could activate an alarm and/or a revolving light, by indicating that someone has stepped out of the restricted area. Where there is an entry lobby, a location detector could be installed that would detect that the wristband was not being worn and would trigger an alarm, causing the gate to the activities to lock.
If a bather removed her/his wristband, the wristband would emit an alarm lasting X seconds and if the bather refused to re-don the wristband, she/he would do so entirely on their own responsibility.
Lockers and Transponders
Each wristband has a transponder with its own frequency that corresponds to the locker number and enables the locker to be opened and closed.
The lockers are managed by a microcontroller, either in rows or covering all of the lockers.
Note: if there are no lockers, the wristbands are either issued at the cash desk or by an automatic vending machine and/or could be rented by membership subscription. The passage through the lobby with the wristband could ensure that the customer is wearing the wristband, and a payment function could be incorporated in the wristband for paid activities, amusement parks, ski resorts, etc.
Water Detector
Mainly in the case of private swimming pools, the wristband could also be fitted with a cardiac-arrest detector and a water detector. This function could be activated and deactivated by various means, by a code, by pressure, by means of a little spike attached to a button inside the box, a key, or by turning a ring or by using a selector, as chosen by the manufacturer, this description being non-restrictive.
If a person falls into the water, her/his wristband would send a signal from the transmitter. The receiver receives the signal and activates the electronically-controlled valve using a relay that would cause the grid to be uplifted to the surface and/or set off an alarm.
The water detector consists of a duct, in whatever form, with at least two openings and with electrodes inside the duct. To discharge the water, the wristband merely needs to be shaken or blown into. As a variation, simple contacts could be positioned sufficiently far apart, on either side of the wristband and not in contact with the skin, which could be rendered watertight by means of valves or sliding plates, the method being non-restrictive.
The invention will be better understood when a description of a method of implementation in relation to swimming pools, given here as a non-restrictive example, on the basis of the figures referred to therein.
The transponder situated on the wristband is positioned in front of the lock (17) activating it without physical contact, thanks to the transponder detector (18) attached to the locker.
a and b: represent an example of a mooring that enables the grid to be uplifted thanks to strap-guides (53) fixed beneath the flanges (52), the straps (51) being fixed to a support (54) that is above the water level, and an example of support bars (97), that may be round or rectangular and that are slid into the strap-guides (53) and rested on the side of the pool (20).
a, b and c: represents examples of pneumatic layouts.
14
a): vacuum switch controlling the vacuum (63), microcontroller (9) and alarm (24).
14
b): cut-out switch for controlling the inflation (60) microcontroller (9) electronically controlled gate-valve E1 (55) and alarm (24).
14
c): the microcontroller (9) to which the cut-out switch (60), on the left in the drawing, is connected, the punch button (64), the panic button (4), the cardiac-arrest detector (65), the uplift and non-emergency button (69), the vacuum switch (63), the descent button (70), the lifeguard button (71) and a command keyboard (72). The right hand-side of the diagrams shows electronically controlled gate-valve E1, the emergency electronically controlled gate-valve (55), electronically controlled gate-valve E2 for non-emergencies (56), electronically controlled gate-valve E3 for evacuating the air (57), the venturi tube (62), the lifeguard's alarm (24), a monitpr (66), a display to the command post (73) and a computer (74).
After the start, depart, note the panic button (4),
Here is an example of a non-restrictive implementation, based on the figures described above. The example used here is a public swimming pool fitted with an inflatable grid.
There are many drownings in public pools due mainly to:
Drowning through immersion syncope, causing cardiac arrest which in turn causes the person to sink immediately,
The bather (16) arriving at the swimming pool (20) goes to the locker area (15) and finds, attached to the locker or cupboard, a wristband (1) bearing the number of locker 25 which is displayed on a liquid crystal display screen (3). The bather (16) shows the box on the wristband (1) to the “lock” (17) on the locker, the locker (15) opens, she/he puts their clothes inside,
The wristband (1) is fitted with a module containing:
They are linked wirelessly by radio waves such as by FM or AM frequencies to a central receiver (31), a console equipped with a screen and printer at the poolside (20) or by SMS text messaging and this is linked in turn to a first-aid station (35) such as the police, ambulance or fire service
The inflatable grid (26) is inflated by a compressed air/gas supply (29), with its own system of inflation and deflation as per
In a case of drowning by immersion syncope, for example, where the person passes out due to cardiac arrest or where the person has a heart attack, the heart rate accelerates or decelerates sharply, the heart stops beating, and the microcontroller recognises a signal corresponding to this heart problem transmitted by the diodes (5 and 96)
(35)
After evacuation, the grid is deflated by activating the descent button, and it is raised to the surface by activating the uplift button so it can be used as a cover or games surface. The descent, uplift and non-emergency buttons can be designed in the form of remote controls.
Controlling Inflation and Deflation,
There are two situations in which the grid is inflated.
In the case of an emergency, there are two options: the punch button, in which the system is triggered automatically thanks to the functions of the wristband.
Inflation in the case of a non-emergency and deflation are performed by using the descent or uplift button which can be provided in the form of remote controls to make the grid re-descend, in which case the grid must contain ballast.
The pneumatic flowchart in
In a Non-emergency
These operations are performed via the microcontroller.
This sequence is non-restrictive, and it is possible to use electronic gate-valves with 2 or 3 channels, and several sources of air/gas can be used with several electronic gate-valves being used simultaneously.
Basic Diagram based on
The lifeguard will be able to see at a glance if this is a real problem by looking at the screen and in the pool, and she/he will trigger the grid, and the first-aid authorities will be warned. In the case of a private pool, the emergency services will be alerted.
Safety Assured for the Lowered Position
An electric or pneumatic venturi tube (62) activated by the microcontroller(9), is used to deflate the grid, this venturi tube being accompanied by a vacuum switch (63) which creates the degree of vacuum necessary for maintaining the grid on the bottom. It is connected to the alarm (24)
Safety Assured when the Grid is Inflated
This is ensured via the microcontroller(9), through a two-stage cut-out switch (60) connected to an alarm (24); if the lower threshold is reached, there is an air leak, and the alarm (24)
Uplifting the Grid
This is performed either by the strap guides (53) fixed to the flanges (52), with straps (51) which are attached to the supports (54) that are above water level, or by supporting bars (97), slid through the strap guides which then become bar-holders.
Locating the Person
Location detectors (27) are placed, as required, in the environment, at the pool side or at the four corners of the pool (20) and/or on the grid (26), making it possible to determine by deduction and triangulation the position of the person in difficulties (36)
Location is determined through the positioning of receiver antennae (50) that pass through a level adapter (68) a multiplexer (67), field detectors (49) and the microcontroller (9). In
The frequencies of FM and AM antennae are subject to change, so they are not mentioned here.
Zones
The location detection device can be adapted to zones or sub-zones in the case of amusement parks, leisure parks, ski resorts and holiday clubs. The wristband will include the cardiac-arrest detector, the panic button and, if there are aquatic zones, a water detector. The wristband will be associated with a human presence detector and any self-protection device such as a barrier that is raised if anyone moves into a danger zone for instance.
The antennae can be linked to one or more solar batteries, as well as to any device making it possible to detect the passage of the wristband into a zone.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4063410 | Welling | Dec 1977 | A |
4129905 | Niemirow | Dec 1978 | A |
5267358 | Roy et al. | Dec 1993 | A |
5385518 | Turner | Jan 1995 | A |
5408222 | Yaffe et al. | Apr 1995 | A |
5421757 | Basiliere | Jun 1995 | A |
5486814 | Quinones | Jan 1996 | A |
5515858 | Myllymaki | May 1996 | A |
5652570 | Lepkofker | Jul 1997 | A |
6127930 | Steffanus | Oct 2000 | A |
6198390 | Schlager et al. | Mar 2001 | B1 |
6574804 | Boujon | Jun 2003 | B1 |
7063582 | Boujon | Jun 2006 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
32 10 590 | Oct 1983 | DE |
0 261 917 | Mar 1988 | EP |
0846440 | Jun 1998 | EP |
2505914 | Nov 1982 | FR |
2 678669 | Jan 1993 | FR |
1 101 585 | Jan 1968 | GB |
2 229 645 | Oct 1990 | GB |
2 254 215 | Sep 1992 | GB |
WO 95 34056 | Dec 1995 | WO |
WO 97 18542 | May 1997 | WO |
WO 0106076 | Jan 2001 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20060214805 A1 | Sep 2006 | US |