Patient Perspectives on SmartHome Technology Deployed at Scale in a Rehabilitation Hospital


Conference paper


Joshua Dawson, James Gardner, Jason Wiese
ASCIP '23, Proceedings of the 2023 {ASCIP} Academy of Spinal Cord Injury Professionals, Academy of Spinal Cord Injury Professionals, Inc., Springfield, IL, USA, 2023 Sep

Slides
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
Dawson, J., Gardner, J., & Wiese, J. (2023). Patient Perspectives on SmartHome Technology Deployed at Scale in a Rehabilitation Hospital. In Proceedings of the 2023 {ASCIP} Academy of Spinal Cord Injury Professionals. Springfield, IL, USA: Academy of Spinal Cord Injury Professionals, Inc.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Dawson, Joshua, James Gardner, and Jason Wiese. “Patient Perspectives on SmartHome Technology Deployed at Scale in a Rehabilitation Hospital.” In Proceedings of the 2023 {ASCIP} Academy of Spinal Cord Injury Professionals. ASCIP '23. Springfield, IL, USA: Academy of Spinal Cord Injury Professionals, Inc., 2023.


MLA   Click to copy
Dawson, Joshua, et al. “Patient Perspectives on SmartHome Technology Deployed at Scale in a Rehabilitation Hospital.” Proceedings of the 2023 {ASCIP} Academy of Spinal Cord Injury Professionals, Academy of Spinal Cord Injury Professionals, Inc., 2023.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@inproceedings{dawson2023a,
  title = {Patient Perspectives on SmartHome Technology Deployed at Scale in a Rehabilitation Hospital},
  year = {2023},
  month = sep,
  address = {Springfield, IL, USA},
  publisher = {Academy of Spinal Cord Injury Professionals, Inc.},
  series = {ASCIP '23},
  author = {Dawson, Joshua and Gardner, James and Wiese, Jason},
  booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2023 {ASCIP} Academy of Spinal Cord Injury Professionals},
  month_numeric = {9}
}

Abstract

Smart hospitals are arriving, driven by the vision to enhance the patient experience, reduce operational burden, and improve hospital workflow. The University of Utah's newly built Craig H. Neilsen Rehabilitation Hospital contains patient rooms where much of the environment is controlled through an app on a hospital furnished iPad or personal device. This technology is potentially transformative for patients experiencing motor or mobility impairments, helping them regain lost freedom and control of their surroundings. This research explores how the technology employed in patient rooms affects - and can better support - patients' and other stakeholders' needs.




Follow this website


You need to create an Owlstown account to follow this website.


Sign up

Already an Owlstown member?

Log in