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  • Meet Sam Sys

    Meet Sam Sys

    Meet Sam Sys, Isansys' hero. He has to go into hospital but is scared because of his previous experience. Once he is told about the new revolutionary monitoring platform which will look after him wherever he goes, he feels much more comfortable and settled. Little does he know it will turn him into a superhero...

  • The PSE monitors every heartbeat, every second

    Precision Patient Moniting - the next generation

    The Patient Status Engine observes every heartbeat, every breath, oxygen saturation every second, temperature every minute and blood pressure as required allowing doctors and nurses to monitor patients better, more closely, more efficiently, and continuously. Clinicians can use it to automatically upload data and draw new insights and tailor care pathways to the needs of the individual patient

  • The Patient Status Engine - Moving higher acuity healthcare closer to home

    The Patient Status Engine - Moving higher acuity healthcare closer to home

    Almost everyday we hear yet another story of things going wrong in hospitals. Patients do not receive timely care, there are too many adverse events and avoidable deaths and hospital acquired infections are only too common. These are problems faced by all hospital operators in all countries worldwide and arise not because hospital staff are negligent or overworked, but essentially because hospital

  • Introducing the Patient Status Engine

    The Future of Patient Monitoring is Here...

    Vast sums spent dealing with patient safety issues are wasted, unnecessary and unsustainable. Monitoring patients better to know their status at all times is one of the very few proven actions that can be done to address this crisis. The focus needs to shift to one that actively promotes good health practices and move the burden of acute care from the hospital to the home.

  • Stopping Sepsis in its Tracks

    Stopping Sepsis in its Tracks

    Existing research clearly highlights early detection of patient deterioration is vital to improving patient safety and avoiding preventable deaths. One solution to this is remote monitoring systems that use wireless, sensing and information technologies to continuously collect and analyse patient data, especially from those patients deemed clinically to be most at risk of contracting sepsis.

  • Urgent changes in healthcare need to be made to provide better care

    Urgent changes in healthcare need to be made to provide better care

    The multiple stories of parents of young children who died on a controversial cardiac ward are a stark reality that more needs to be done to bring about significant changes in healthcare practice and provide better care.
    Eleven children from England and Wales died following heart surgery between 2010 and 2014 at the Bristol Royal Hospital for Children and everyone is hoping that major changes w

  • The Importance of Early Warning Scores in Identifying Deteriorating Patients

    The Importance of Early Warning Scores in Identifying Deteriorating Patients

    There is now overwhelming evidence that significant numbers of patients are harmed from the healthcare they receive resulting in permanent injury, increased length of stay in hospital or even death.
    It is now widely accepted that 1 in 10 patients admitted to hospital will be unintentionally harmed in some way. Some of these adverse events will be inevitable complications of treatment, however,

  • Spotlight on: Keith Errey, CEO of Isansys Lifecare Ltd

    Spotlight on: Keith Errey, CEO of Isansys Lifecare Ltd

    In 2010, the cofounders of Isansys Lifecare Ltd, Keith Errey and Rebecca Weir, set out with a vision to overcome barriers of technology integration and data accessibility in healthcare. Here Keith Errey talks about how patient monitoring technologies and data analytics improve clinical decision making and patient outcomes

  • IN 2015, LET’S DO SOMETHING SMARTER

    IN 2015, LET’S DO SOMETHING SMARTER

    “Let’s allow doctors and nurses to see the start of trends before they become an issue.” By Mathew Key, Head of Technology at Isansys

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