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Conf Proc IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc · Jan 2004
Lifeguard--a personal physiological monitor for extreme environments.
- K Montgomery, C Mundt, G Thonier, A Tellier, U Udoh, V Barker, R Ricks, L Giovangrandi, P Davies, Y Cagle, J Swain, J Hines, and G Kovacs.
- National Center for Space Biological Technologies, Stanford University, CA, USA.
- Conf Proc IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc. 2004 Jan 1;3:2192-5.
AbstractMonitoring vital signs in applications that require the subject to be mobile requires small, lightweight, and robust sensors and electronics. A body-worn system should be unobtrusive, noninvasive, and easy-to-use. It must be able to log vital signs data for several hours as well as transmit it on demand in real-time using secure wireless technologies. The NASA Ames Research Center (Astrobionics) and Stanford University (National Center for Space Biological Technologies) are currently developing a wearable physiological monitoring system for astronauts, called LifeGuard, that meets all of the above requirements and is also applicable to clinical, home-health monitoring, first responder and military applications.
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