of 1855 patients who died before hospital discharge were not admitted to critical care at any stage after surgery [1].
Patient safety is a main concern to clinicians. Wearable devices provide safer and more comfortable monitoring experience. The accuracy, usability of wearable devices and the reliability and security of wireless signal transmission bring great challenges to clinical application.
To meet these challenges Mindray develops the mWear wearable patient monitor to better monitor the patient safety and provide simplicity of clinical application in multiple scenarios.
Medical-grade Wearable Monitoring
Refined product design and medical-grade algorithm give mWear the ability to enhance patient safety.
Refined design
Reliable design
Medical-grade monitoring
Ring SpO2 sensor
Neutral attitude
Wearable device was well accepted by patients, but only moderately by nurses. Acceptability of the device among nurses needs further improvement [3].
Neutral attitude
Wearable device was well accepted by patients, but only moderately by nurses. Acceptability of the device among nurses needs further improvement [3].
Smooth Workflow
How to make the wearable devices easier and better to use? Based on the real clinical needs, Mindray tries to solve the inconveniences from three dimensions.
Monitoring Preparation
Patient Monitoring
Charging & Device Management
Reliable and Accessible IT Solution
Homehospital application*
mWear also extends to the home through the App so that patients are safely monitored at home.
* Will go online on 2023.01.01
Accessible IT Solution
The application of mWear in hospital and homehospital use the same monitoring system. All data can be displayed, analysed, and sent to the 3rd-party system by Mindray standard interface for a more comprehensive picture of patient health.
[1] Pearse R M, Rui P M, Bauer P, et al. Mortality after surgery in Europe: a 7 day cohort study[J]. Lancet, 2012, 380(9847): 1059-1065.
[2] Technical algorithm patent No.: EP 18921425.7, PCT/CN2018/088982
[3] Leenen JPL, Dijkman EM, van Dijk
JD, et al.Feasibility of continuous monitoring of vital signs in surgical patients on a general ward: an observational cohort study. BMJ Open 2021;11:e042735.