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International Society of Surgery (ISS)
Société Internationale de Chirurgie (SIC)
Integrated Societies: IATSIC | IASMEN | BSI | ISDS
EARLY DETECTION OF POSTOPERATIVE DETERIORATION WITH ENHANCED MONITORING USING SENSORS (EMUS)
a.jiwa@sms.ed.ac.uk
 
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Slot ID
465-02
Abstract Title
EARLY DETECTION OF POSTOPERATIVE DETERIORATION WITH ENHANCED MONITORING USING SENSORS (EMUS)
Author Details
No. of Authors
10
Including the presenting author
Author 1
Afra Jiwa a.jiwa@sms.ed.ac.uk University of Edinburgh Centre for Medical Informatics Edinburgh United Kingdom *
Author 2
Malcolm Cameron malcolm.cameron@ed.ac.uk University of Edinburgh Centre for Medical Informatics Edinburgh United Kingdom
Author 3
Neil Clark Neil.Clark@ed.ac.uk University of Edinburgh Centre for Medical Informatics Edinburgh United Kingdom
Author 4
Eilidh Gunn Eilidh.Gunn@ed.ac.uk University of Edinburgh Centre for Medical Informatics Edinburgh United Kingdom
Author 5
Theresa Ikegwuonu tikegwu2@exseed.ed.ac.uk University of Edinburgh Centre for Medical Informatics Edinburgh United Kingdom
Author 6
Riinu Pius riinu.pius@ed.ac.uk University of Edinburgh Centre for Medical Informatics Edinburgh United Kingdom
Author 7
Katie Shaw catherine.shaw@ed.ac.uk University of Edinburgh Centre for Medical Informatics Edinburgh United Kingdom
Author 8
Ewen Harrison Ewen.Harrison@ed.ac.uk University of Edinburgh Centre for Medical Informatics Edinburgh United Kingdom
Author 9
Antonio Ramos De La Medina ramos.antonio@heveracruz.mx Hospital EspaƱol de Veracruz Department of Surgery Veracruz Mexico
Author 10
On behalf of the Wellcome Leap Save Collaborative Ewen.Harrison@ed.ac.uk University of Edinburgh Centre for Medical Informatics Edinburgh United Kingdom
Author 11
Author 12
Presenting Author Name
Afra Jiwa
Presenting Author Email
a.jiwa@sms.ed.ac.uk
Presenting Author Country
United Kingdom
Abstract
Abstract type
Oral or Poster
Introduction *
Early Warning Scores are used globally to detect patient deterioration. These are powered by intermittent physiological observations which are subject to user error, instrument failure and staffing availability, which can lead to escalation delays. Novel wearable sensors offer accurate, automated, and continuous patient monitoring. This study aims to perform feasibility testing of a wearable sensor in eight variably-resourced countries.
Material & Method *
This prospective observational cohort study recruited patients undergoing procedures with an incision of 5 cm or greater in the UK, India, Rwanda, Ghana, Nigeria, Benin, Guatemala, and Mexico. Continuous heart rate, respiratory rate, peripheral oxygen saturation, skin temperature, and accelerometery were recorded using a wearable sensor, worn for up to 10 days postoperatively. Sensor data was unavailable to clinical teams. Standard of care clinical data was simultaneously collected. Once uploaded, study data was available to local research teams via a Shiny dashboard for near real-time data quality monitoring. Focus groups with healthcare professionals and 1-1 interviews with patients explored barriers and facilitators to future implementation.
Results *
At interim analysis 786 patients were enrolled from 17 hospitals in eight countries. 232 complications were detected. Device maintenance and data quality monitoring was conducted locally at all sites. Individual case analysis highlighted early detection using wearable sensors compared with intermittent physiological observations, across every world bank income threshold.
Conclusion *
Continuous monitoring with sensors can be successfully deployed across a range of global settings. These technologies may detect physiological deterioration earlier than the standard of care and are feasible to implement globally.
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Category
Select Main Category
1 General Topics organized by ISS/SIC
Select Sub Category
1.09 Surgery in Low resource Countries
Submission Status
Submitted
Word counter
245
Abstract Prizes
Eligible for the BSI Free Paper Prize
No
- Presenting author must register to the congress by 30 November 2025
- Author must submit a full-length manuscript conforming to the format of orignial articles in the World Journal of Surgery WJS by 30 November 2025
Eligible for the Grassi Prize
No
- Author must be age 40 or younger
- One of the authors must be a member of ISDS
- Presenting author must register to the congress by 30 November 2025
- Author must submit a full-length manuscript to the World Journal of Surgery WJS by 30 November 2025
Eligible for the Kitajima Prize
No
- Author must be age 40 or younger
- One of the authors must be a member of ISDS
- Presenting author must register to the congress by 30 November 2025
- Author must submit a full-length manuscript to the World Journal of Surgery WJS by 30 November 2025
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