1. Contactless Sleep Monitoring for Early Detection of Health Deteriorations in Community-Dwelling Older Adults: Exploratory Study
- Author
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Angela Botros, Bruno Pais, Narayan Schütz, Prabitha Urwyler, Daniel Gatica-Perez, Hugo Saner, Tobias Nef, René M. Müri, Valérie Santschi, and Philipp Buluschek
- Subjects
Gerontology ,0302 clinical medicine ,digital biomarkers ,sleep restlessness ,Health care ,030212 general & internal medicine ,older adults ,Sleep Stages ,620 Ingenieurwissenschaften ,body movements in bed ,Sleep apnea ,telemonitoring ,sleep monitoring ,T58.5-58.64 ,quality ,Sleep (system call) ,Independent Living ,Sleep onset ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,toss and turns ,570 Biowissenschaften ,Biologie ,Population ageing ,Visual analogue scale ,Polysomnography ,Vital signs ,610 Medicine & health ,Health Informatics ,Information technology ,03 medical and health sciences ,360 Social problems & social services ,medicine ,Humans ,care ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Original Paper ,aging-in-place ,people ,contactless sensing ,business.industry ,360 Soziale Probleme, Sozialdienste ,620 Engineering ,medicine.disease ,Early Diagnosis ,pervasive computing ,recommendations ,570 Life sciences ,biology ,home-monitoring ,business ,610 Medizin und Gesundheit ,Sleep ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background: Population aging is posing multiple social and economic challenges to society. One such challenge is the social and economic burden related to increased health care expenditure caused by early institutionalizations. The use of modern pervasive computing technology makes it possible to continuously monitor the health status of community-dwelling older adults at home. Early detection of health issues through these technologies may allow for reduced treatment costs and initiation of targeted preventive measures leading to better health outcomes. Sleep is a key factor when it comes to overall health and many health issues manifest themselves with associated sleep deteriorations. Sleep quality and sleep disorders such as sleep apnea syndrome have been extensively studied using various wearable devices at home or in the setting of sleep laboratories. However, little research has been conducted evaluating the potential of contactless and continuous sleep monitoring in detecting early signs of health problems in community-dwelling older adults., Objective: In this work we aim to evaluate which contactlessly measurable sleep parameter is best suited to monitor perceived and actual health status changes in older adults., Methods: We analyzed real-world longitudinal (up to 1 year) data from 37 community-dwelling older adults including more than 6000 nights of measured sleep. Sleep parameters were recorded by a pressure sensor placed beneath the mattress, and corresponding health status information was acquired through weekly questionnaires and reports by health care personnel. A total of 20 sleep parameters were analyzed, including common sleep metrics such as sleep efficiency, sleep onset delay, and sleep stages but also vital signs in the form of heart and breathing rate as well as movements in bed. Association with self-reported health, evaluated by EuroQol visual analog scale (EQ-VAS) ratings, were quantitatively evaluated using individual linear mixed-effects models. Translation to objective, real-world health incidents was investigated through manual retrospective case-by-case analysis., Results: Using EQ-VAS rating based self-reported perceived health, we identified body movements in bed & mdash;measured by the number toss-and-turn events & mdash;as the most predictive sleep parameter (t score=& ndash;0.435, P value [adj]=, Conclusions: Our results suggest that nightly body movements in bed could potentially be a highly relevant as well as easy to interpret and derive digital biomarker to monitor a wide range of health deteriorations in older adults. As such, it could help in detecting health deteriorations early on and provide timelier, more personalized, and precise treatment options., (JMIRMhealth Uhealth 2021;9(6):e24666) doi: 10.2196/24666
- Published
- 2021
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