The invention relates to systems for monitoring the status of conditions or alarm points or alarm variables in healthcare facilities or institutions and, more particularly, to a monitoring system for use in such facilities or institutions and using monitoring panels of modular character capable of monitoring a plurality of parameters and providing alarms or other communications signifying out-of-limit conditions.
In healthcare and laboratory installations such as hospitals, laboratories, research facilities, clinics and other health-related or scientific or laboratory facilities where there are piped medical gasses, oxygen, clinical vacuum, nitrous oxide, medical air, carbon dioxide, nitrogen, oxygen/carbon dioxide, waste anesthetic gas disposal (WAGD) lines, and various other and also specialty gases, as well as potentially other fluids including gases generally, are provided at various points through such a facility, or where other important parameters may need to be monitored, it is necessary or desired to be able to monitor parameters associated with such substances by the use of electronic sensing, to determine if the varies from a preselected set point. The term “healthcare facility” or simply “facility” is used herein for convenience to refer to all such different kinds of facilities, including those not directly involved in health care per se, such as laboratories and research facilities.
In any such facility, if a gas pressure is the variable or parameter to be sensed by transducer, it is desired to detect underpressure or overpressure conditions. As a specific example, breathing oxygen pressure at a predetermined location may need to be sensed because, if breathing oxygen is too high or too low, patient safety may be compromised.
Typically, gas distribution in a hospital, for example, is monitored by medical gas alarms. The requirements for such alarms have been defined by the National Fire Prevention Association (NFPA). These medical gas alarms are typified by the use of separate alarm modules intended to measure separate lines or sources of gas pressure. That is, each separate module is dedicated to measuring a single gas for a particular parameter, such as pressure, which then displays the output of the pressure transducer in communication with the single gas and is programmed to sound an alarm if the pressure output exceeds or drops below a predetermined threshold. Further, many operating rooms require an additional alarm system dedicated for that particular operating room so a physician or healthcare professional can make sure all systems are functioning properly.
As such, prior art systems to monitor gas distribution handled by a fixed number of gas lines have required a fixed number of separate modules such that there is a monitoring module for each gas line or variable to be monitored. This has required many modules and has led to greatly complicated monitoring systems or so-called “alarm systems,” as well as use of different types of alarm monitoring systems in a given facility.
A simpler, more efficient, and more economical approach is believed to be more appropriate, and is considered to have been achieved in the system of the present invention.
By comparison with the known art, each panel in the presently disclosed system is capable of monitoring the status of a plurality of piped medical gases or other conditions, such as pressure or temperature and giving indication in response thereto.
The present system may for convenience be referred to in this description as a monitoring system in that parameters, variables, functions and values or conditions are monitored and may as monitored be used in typical operation of the monitoring system to provide an aural, visual or other alarm, or to result in a communication of a desired type even if not necessarily an alarm in the strict sense.
The terms “variable”, “condition”, “function”, “parameter” and “condition” and “value” and their equivalents and attributes are used herein interchangeably and in their broadest sense to mean individual attributes (such as temperature, pressure, volume, value, status or other function) to be monitored during operation of the system.
The term “out-of-limit condition” is used in its broadest sense noted hereinabove, and means in general a situation or change of condition wherein such a parameter, variable, condition, function, status, condition or value or any equivalents or attribute thereof varies from predetermined limit or limits, as illustrated by overpressure or underpressure, overtemperature or undertemperature, status change, switch closing or switch opening or other change of status, or unacceptable or undesired or notable change which is desired to be sensed and monitored.
In addition, the term “alarm” is used herein in its broadest sense to connote signals of whatever type, whether electronic, telephonic, radio, video, visual, aural, or otherwise palpable form, as well as providing an alarm or warning, but possibly meaning only the provision of signals that should be noted, recorded or given attention, whether or not alarming or requiring providing a warning, where a situation or change of condition wherein such a parameter, variable, condition, function, condition or value or any equivalents or attribute thereof varies from predetermined limit or limits.
The monitoring system provides wide and flexible capabilities. Various other conditions in addition to pressure can be sensed by the system, such as supply level, liquid level, equipment or zone or fluid temperature, and equipment operation status or other attributes which may need to be monitored as to values or specific functions.
Typical of the presently disclosed monitoring system, and without limitation to the possibility of change, it is desired that where such a parameter (e.g., pressure) to be measured varies by more than 20% (as an exemplary predetermined variance or differential from the a selected set point), being thus too high or too low, sensing must take place and, if needed, an alarm given locally and/or optionally centrally communicated also; and for central monitoring it is necessary to know promptly the physical and/or data address of the alarm at the alarm point. The system provides such capabilities.
The monitoring system uses one or more panels which at respective locations where one or more parameters such as gas pressures are to be monitored. Each such location or alarm point or monitoring point will have a unique address signifying location, as associated with a specific transducer sensing a parameter such as a condition or variable at a location.
The monitoring system may optionally allow a healthcare facility to monitor centrally many such monitoring panels, such as up to 256 separate panels from a central location, to record (i.e., to sense and respond to) data associated with an out-of-limit condition, and to enable such a condition to be remedied promptly.
The monitoring system is also capable of rapidly recognizing the existence of an out-of-limit condition from one of the separate monitoring panels, showing the type of alarm (whether being an out-of-limit condition or an actual alarm), the nature of the out-of-limit condition, such as underpressure or overpressure, and the address of the monitoring panel from which the information is being transmitted.
Printed circuit board (PCB) modules are provided which can be used at each of the separate panels such that each module can be selectively configured for different uses in the monitoring system.
Each panel is a single entity device or unit providing an assembly of grouped modular configuration for monitoring gas source lines for multiple parameters, such as pressure, temperature, etc. The panels can be located throughout a healthcare or laboratory or clinic or other facility with capability for communication with a central facility having a personal-type computer (PC). Specific modules for each panel may have interrelated functions, providing capability for monitoring gas pressures or vacuum lines, and signaling in response to changes in such pressures or relative pressures. A plurality of different gas variables or lines, and switch inputs, can be monitored for signaling and/or alarm purposes, thereby avoiding the need for burdensome multiplication of sensors and alarms as additional variables or lines which might later require monitoring after installation of the monitoring system. The monitoring system is thus readily expandable whether at the panel locations or in the overall sense.
Because the monitoring system may vary in size according to the facility in which it is installed, e.g., whether it be a hospital complex, or a small clinic, the monitoring system is designed and constructed according to a modular design philosophy in order to allow monitoring modules, including PCBs and components thereof, to be selectively configured and then selected for different uses in the monitoring system. In that way the monitoring system facilitates flexible growth. In the monitoring system PCB design is shared by different modules, and identical PCBs can be readily configured with different circuit elements according to the purpose required of the PCB for constructing a specific module. Thus, for the first time, a monitoring system achieves a universality or interchangeability of circuit design features. Economy, efficiency, lowered manufacturing cost, and extraordinary performance and reliability are gained from this novel design philosophy in the monitoring system.
It will be seen from the foregoing and from the following description that among the features, and advantages of the present invention are the provision of a monitoring system with features designed to monitor the status of piped medical gases, including WAGD lines, and the respective delivery pressures of each gas or relative vacuum; which is capable of providing an alarm or otherwise signaling or providing communication upon the occurrence of a predetermined variance of a variable or parameter from a preset set point; which is capable of reporting such conditions to a central monitoring facility; which is useful to alert system users to situations that may cause personal injury or jeopardy, or equipment damage; which is capable of modem telecommunication of other out-of-limit conditions; which is capable of responding to further alarm or out-of-limit conditions even after an initial fault is detected; which includes self-test features to ensure proper operation; which provides visual display features which give rapid visual indication of relative levels or values being monitored so as to give the user quick assessment of conditions; which is capable of detecting and giving warning of discrete conditions such as normal, abnormal, “in use” and “out of use” which are being sensed; which operates safely over a wide variety of operating conditions; which provides high accuracy of operation over a wide range of possible variables or parameters being sensed; and which is capable of quick, safe, reliable and economic installation; and which is economically and reliably configured; and which may be expanded as may be required.
Corresponding reference characters identify corresponding elements throughout the several views of the drawings.
Referring to the drawings, a monitoring system is illustrated and generally designated as 10 in
One or more panels 16 are provided that monitor status of one or more measurable variables. Each panel 16 is a single entity device or unit (as more fully described below) providing an assembly of grouped modular configuration for monitoring gas source lines for multiple parameters, such as pressure, temperature, etc. The panels 16 can be located throughout a healthcare or laboratory or clinic or other facility with capability for communication with computer system 12 which may be a PC including the usual keyboard and printer or printers and other accessories, all as being part of the usual peripheral device 12′, for example, a PC, including various cabling and connections as well as wired or wireless communication capabilities as shown below the PC pictorial representation 12 and which do not need to be separately illustrated.
A printer (not shown) may be used with computer system 12 should be suitable capable of making a printout or other hard copy of desired data, such as a log of out-of-limit conditions reported from the panels with time and location data.
The computer system 12 may be operatively associated with optional network access devices of peripheral device 12′ in order to enable computer system 12 to contact outside resources to transmit and store data. Outside resources may include computer or computer services on an intranet or an extranet. Any such network access device may include an internal or external network card, a modem, and other wired and wireless accesses devices as will be appreciated in the art, as well as pager connections and facilities. Thus, when out-of-limit conditions are reported by data converter 14 to computer system 12, it may have programming to cause a pager call to be made so that maintenance or supervisory person will learn of the nature of the fault or condition, its location, and the need to take action.
Peripheral devices 12′ may include information and data storage capacity to hold and retain data in a digital form for access by computer system 12 and may comprise primary and/or secondary storage, and may include memory. Storage may comprise, for example, a hard drive having at least 500 megabytes of free hard disk space and at least 128 megabytes of RAM (random access memory).
Specific modules of each panel 16 are described below to provide interrelated functions for receiving input from sensors from either a remote location or the immediate location, or both, and reporting of variables and for providing out-of-limit condition indications if an input variable differs from a set point by a predetermined differential or variance such as plus or minus 20%. Modules for pressure sensing are capable of monitoring a pressure of a plurality of different gas variables or lines, and modules for switch sensing are capable of monitoring a plurality of different switch inputs.
In one embodiment, up to sixty-four panels 16 may be operatively connected on signal data line 18. Of course, the monitoring system 10 may be operatively connected to more than sixty-four panels 16. Panels 16 may use RS-485 protocol to communicate over data lines 18. Other protocols, whether known or yet to be implemented, are possible. One implementation of one of the panels 16 is described in greater detail below. Other implementations of one or more panels 16 are also contemplated.
The data lines 18 transmit the monitoring data from panels 16 to data converter 14. In one embodiment, data lines 18 may each connect one or more panels 16 in a series, while in another possible embodiment data lines 18 can connect one or more panels 16 in parallel. Other implementations of the data lines 18 are possible.
Data converter 14 coordinates the transmission and reception of data between one or more panels 16 and computer system 12. One implementation of data converter 14 is described in greater detail below.
Various displays (whether alphanumeric or as a vertical or other LED array) of the modules will be evident without need for specific enumeration in that each module (other than the blank module) is constructed by a respective printed circuit board on which there will be present circuit elements (including the displays and switches and LEDs, etc.) corresponding to or represented by the panel view.
Thus, the skilled artisan will recognize that there are a discrete series of PCBs used to constitute a panel installation. The PCBs comprises the following: control module, 8-transducer module, 10-switch signal module, pressure/vacuum module, dual module, and data converter board.
The monitoring system 10 provides monitoring and variable-sensing functions and features which are carried out by panels 16 which are located at various points in a facility using the monitoring system 10.
The term “panel” is a convenient terminology to connote an array of modules 52, according to desired interrelationships of modules 52 and the predetermined functions to be provided by them, the number of variables (e.g., conditions or parameters) to be sensed by them, and the type of communication or alarm to be provided in response to an out-of-limit condition. The term “panel” is similarly not intended to be limited to a specifically preferred physical arrangement as disclosed herein. Instead, these terms merely refer to a suitable array or related grouping of modules 52, as in adjacent or closely-grouped relation and with the modules 52 enclosed in a suitable box (or boxes) or other enclosure types such as for panel-type wall or wall-surface mounting according to customer needs and specifications.
Control Module
The control module 52a may be the first module in each panel 16.
Referring to
It should be kept in mind that that PCB layout shown in
Regardless of the PCB layout for sensing modules 52b-g, it is emphasized that a communication chip U2 is used only for the control module 52a, being an RS458 communication chip that relays information back to the central PC if the latter is present. As shown, switches S1-S4 also are present only on the control module 52a such that switches S1-S4 they allow the user to program the monitoring panel 16. When the new monitoring system is first installed, it is necessary to set up the sensor types and the set points. Switches S1-S4 may be used for that purpose.
In addition, terminals J15 and J16 may be terminals for connection of the cable (not shown) that links together the various modules 52a-g.
8-Transducer Module
Referring to
As shown in
With reference to
For provision of the 8-transducer module 52b, the inputs J13 and J14 are not needed for the 8-transducer module 52b and accordingly the diodes isolating those inputs are not required except for the 10-switch module, discussed below.
Dual 4-input multiplexer U4 may be used to multiplex the inputs, so that eight inputs are provided on only four lines which are presented with on outputs 2Y, 1Y, 4Y and 3Y of U4, and these lines provide inputs back to the main processor U1.
U6 may be an LED driver which drives diodes LEDs D1-D10, which show, if a transducer being sensed is out-of-limit by 20% above or below the set point. Thus, for the 8-transducer module 52b, LEDs D1-D10 show transducer conditions. J15 and J16 may be terminals for connection of the cable that links the various modules.
10-Switch Signal Module
Referring to
With reference to
Pressure/Vacuum Module
Referring to
Referring to
Dual Module
By comparison with the pressure/vacuum module 52e/52f, the configuration of the dual module will not need that type of display, where instead LEDs D1, D9 and D11 operate to show the condition on sensor 2. Sensors 1 and 2 are connected by inputs J4 and J5. Sensor 1 is driven from the central processor U1 and it reads inputs from the transducers and then sends signals to U2 and U3 if present to drive the LEDs to display the data as 7-segment displays. Integrated circuits U4 and U5 may be used to output alarm conditions to other panels 16 by means of switch outputs provided on outputs J6-J9.
Data Converter Board
Referring to
With reference to
Operation of the System
Because each panel 16 is a single entity device or unit providing an assembly of grouped modular configuration for monitoring gas source lines for multiple parameters, such as pressure, temperature, etc., the panels 16 can be located as needed now or in the future throughout a healthcare or laboratory or clinic or other facility with capability for communication with a central facility having computer system 12, as shown in
Installation of the System
Referring to
It will now be understood that a panel 16 of the remote monitoring assembly, which consists of a control module as well as several monitoring modules, is used in the following ways:
Information from individual sensors, (transducers) and the monitoring module(s) of panels 16 as described operate to determine accordingly whether a variable has exceeded a predetermined variation from a set point. A control module 52a of the panel 16 monitors the monitoring modules 52b-g and collects information from them. If one of the variables being monitored varies from a set point by more than a predetermined value, such as 20%, plus or minus, the control module will detect the anomalous reading, and may be configured to provide a warning or alarm, whether visual and/or aural and/or otherwise, and it is convenient in healthcare facilities where patient treatment is involved that the warning be both aural and visual. If the panel 16 is connected to the computer system 12, it will then transmit that information on to the computer system 12. Therefore, it is to be understood that the monitoring modules 52b-g are those which sense variations from a set point, whereas the control module 52a of a panel 16 collects the data for local signaling or alarm purposes and, optionally, sends such communication to a remote location (such as a central control) for recordation and taking of action. One such action may be to actuate a warning at the central station or location for supervisory determination of the need for action. Another such action may be to call a pager by which a maintenance or supervisory person will learn of the nature of the alarm condition, its location, and the need to take action.
A panel 16 can display output to monitor a plurality gas sources (typically up to eight individual gas sources, according to a disclosed embodiment) for various parameters, values functions or conditions, such as pressure, temperature, etc. Preferably, the single unit has a plurality of transducers with each transducer being in communication with a respective gas source and preferably comprises one-four digit display and eight lights, although other display arrangements may be contemplated. For example, a light may be dedicated for each of the transducer inputs used to monitor gas pressure or other parameter with a “red” light indicating an alarm and a “green” light indicating normal status; however, other displays which display numerical values for various gas parameters may be used. Panel 16 saves wall space, permits installation in minimal time and achieves excellent function and reliability without high cost.
A facility can have one or more panels 16, as shown in
Although the foregoing includes a description of the best mode contemplated for carrying out the invention, various modifications are contemplated. As various modifications can be made in the constructions and methods herein described and illustrated without departing from the scope of the invention, it is intended that all matter contained in the foregoing description or shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative rather than limiting.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60730057 | Oct 2005 | US |