'Magic Carpet' Could Help Prevent Falls Among the Elderly 87
Hugh Pickens writes "Falls are a major cause of injury and death among over-70s, and account for more than 50% of hospital admissions for accidental injury. Thus, being able to identify changes in people's walking patterns and gait in the natural environment, such as in a corridor in a nursing home, could help identity mobility problems early on. Now, BBC reports that researchers have shown off a 'magic carpet' that can detect falls and may even predict mobility problems. Beneath the carpet is a mesh of optical fibers that detect and plot movement as pressure bends them, changing the light detected at the carpet's edges. These deflected light patterns help electronics 'learn' walking patterns and detect if they are deteriorating. With over 19,700 deaths in the elderly in the U.S. in 2008 from unintentional fall injuries and 2.2 million nonfatal fall injuries among older adults treated in emergency departments, spotting subtle changes in a person's walking habits may help identify changes that might go unnoticed by family members or care-givers. 'The carpet can gather a wide range of information about a person's condition; from biomechanical to chemical sensing of body fluids, enabling holistic sensing to provide an environment that detects and responds to changes in patient condition,' says Patricia Scully from The University of Manchester's Photon Science Institute."
Help! I've fallen and I can't get up! (Score:1)
What if it detected a weight profile that was larger than an average step for a period of time longer than a minute, could it call 911 and request 'Elderly Person Down' assistance? Or at least ask if it should call 911 and if no voice response was given then dial it?
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Dogs can't talk so one laying on the carpet may pose problems for that scenario.
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I suspect that an elderly person with mobility issues might not want to look after a dog that's roughly the same size and weight as them.
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Dogs tend to make a different impact when casually lying down than the elderly falling down, I think.
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I'm concerned about the false positives a weight and rhythm sensitive carpet would be subject to.
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I was thinking that too, or (from the poster above) the dog analogy is another good one. But if it's that sensitive it can find the weight of the person based on the pressure profile and it should be able to tell when a specific individual is lying on the carpet, right? I don't have all the answers, I just think it would have practical applications for assisted living communities so that they can tell if a person takes a fall.
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The 'I've fallen and I can't get up' problem is probably better answered by a bracelet / fob whatever that has an accelerometer, perhaps a pulse meter and a wireless or whatever connection. To use a floor mat to determine whether granny is alive seems complicated.
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arm bracelets can fall of which should not be too good for false positives. Also a person might fall slowly and still lie there slowly dying of starvation without any alert. A neck bracelet might work, triggering an alert when it is in close proximity to the mat. This should not be a problem as old people who need this stuff generally don't do handstands or cartwheels.
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It's just more than telling if granny is on the floor, TFA I read yesterday said it can fortell falls by a person's gait, preventing the fall in the first place.
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What about drunken geezers? (Score:3)
I saw this yesterday. I'm 60, the only time I fall down is when I'm drunk. Sometimes I'm a bit wobbly when I first wake up until I've had coffee, even when I hadn't drank. What would this device "think" about that? My mother had an inner ear problem a few years ago (she's 84), I wonder if this would have kept her from breaking her arm?
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I think the cooler magic carpet would inflate to cushion a fall.
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I think the point is to continue to allow the person to remain ambulatory as long as possible for many different reasons both practical and not. Perhaps also to detect a temporary condition caused by tiredness, TIA or some other event.
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A phone with a video camera and link to some analysis software (or, heaven forbid, a real person) would work fine. Do this once a month or so - say when the kids show up. Probably a lot easier than the high tech carpet.
Hell, 30 seconds of walking in front of a physical therapist would get you the same info.
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Wheel chairs have their own problems and cause further medical problems. A study done a few years ago showed that 100% of the study's elderly subjects, even in their nineties (the oldest), who could walk 1/4 mile (about 1/2 km, 1 km = .6 mile) all were still alive five years later, and the distance one could walk correlated with how long you had to live.
This is only [damn, what's the word? I'm getting old!], but my cousin broke his neck at age 16 and was in a wheel chair the rest of his life -- he died last
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Why not exoskeletons? With that many people needing them, the costs will go waaay down over time.
Help! My battery's discharged and I can't get up!
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Also, exoskeletons may have the same problems as wheelchairs, as far as making you die early is concerned.
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A walker might be a better compromise. They could cheaply be given to people more likely to fall and they would not remove the ability to walk.
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I've seen folks with walkers fall too, but they were at the bar at the time. Hell, I saw one guy fall out of his motorized wheelchair!
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How do you keep it clean? (Score:1)
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how do you ensure it stays as sterile as possible?
Um... It's magic?
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You cover it in silicone. Then you can use whatever cleaning products you like, within reason.
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sigh (Score:3)
What will happen here:
1. Invention will be commercialised;
2. "Assistance device" corporate welfare company will try to sell this to local authorities;
3. Old and disabled people will be offered this as a cheap alternative to the help they actually need;
4. Such people will fall anyway;
5. And then need more NHS and residential care than they would have otherwise.
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Invasion of Privacy! (Score:2)
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Not useful in my experience (Score:5, Funny)
In my limited experience watching relatives fall and die soon after (well, not in person, but hearing about it) its not the fall that's the problem, but the heart attack that lead to the pain that led to the fall, or the stroke that led to the fall, or the kidney/liver failure that led to mass confusion that led to the fall... yes these relatives of mine technically did fall and then die, but the "real problem" was what made them fall, not the fall that made them die soon after. So I'm not entirely sure than locking old people in a kids inflatable "bouncy castle" is much help.
Also it seems a stereotype at the hospital/old folks home/hospice that the last thing people do before being permanently bedridden is fall, then they're like chained down or ordered never to stand again, which coincidentally happens pretty late in their decline, so naturally they continue to decline and die like the next week, because apparently standing is not terribly difficult so its one of the last things to go. Come to think of it, it is pretty easy, since its one of the first things kids learn to do...
I'm just saying its not going to make anyone live longer or better, just means they'll get confined to bed rest and die soon after anyway. So its kind of a depressing invention. Kind of the opposite of "let me die with my boots on" type of thing.
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No, rather one use of an anecdote in argumentation can be effective, and another ineffective.
Anecdotes are effective when they provide counterexamples which shatter generalizations.
They are not effective when they are used for making generalizations.
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What ever happened to natural selection???
major cause of injury and death among over-70s
If you're still actively reproducing over age 70 let me give you a high five.
Now a magic carpet to prevent pregnant chicks from falling, or little kids before reproducing age, that would be natural selection. This is just being humane.
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Well, congratulations on writing one of the stupidest, most ill-informed posts ever. I really hope you are just trolling and could not possibly be that ignorant.
Odd choice (Score:1)
Mining (Score:1)
Great!
Now we have a database of thousands of people's daily habits, combined with their addresses and age.
We can query it to find out the best time to air TV shows.
Or use it to find out the best time to break in and steal the TV.
I'm kidding. I'm sure they'll keep the data safe, just like Apple does.
chemical sensing of body fluids (Score:2)
"chemical sensing of body fluids"
So... am I going to be the first one to ask.... is this carpet detecting urine, feces, sweat, snot, saliva, semen, vaginal fluid, and other fluids that could drip from the body to floor?
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"unintentional fall injuries" (Score:3)
I'm glad they clarified that the injuries were from *unintentional* falls.
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No, they actually meant the the injuries resulting from the falls were unintentional.
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People get injured when their parachutes don't open, they get injured on movie sets, they get injured doing stupid non-movie stunts. So yes, people do get injured when falling intentionally.
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I'm thinking in an article talking about the 70+ crowd the parachute and stunt stats are pretty much sampling noise.
Should be combined with motors to move the carpet (Score:2)
This could be more useful if combined with some kind of motor system that could move the carpet to prevent the fall, with an algorithm similar to what segways use.
The tough part is doing something... (Score:2)
Intentional fall injuries? (Score:2)
No figures for intentional fall injuries ...?
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Yeah. And those sympathy strokes they keep pulling are getting a bit old as well.
Ignores the bigger issue (Score:2)
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Why should they have to move out, if it's their own house? If I want three bedrooms all to myself, there's nothing wrong with that.
There's millons of square kilometres you can use to build your own house, you know.
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If I want three bedrooms all to myself, there's nothing wrong with that.
10 miles from anything else. So you have to drive everywhere. But when you are no longer capable [ktla.com], don't come crying to us when your license gets pulled.
Maybe we need 'magic crosswalks' that sense when a driver just doesn't have what it takes anymore.
Causality inversion (Score:1)
Most people think the fall is the cause of broken bones, etc... when in fact it's usually the other way around.
I expect that this carpet could in fact help, in some cases, which makes it work doing. I think that there are many other ways to approach this which might be fruitful as well.
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This.
Though I was going to say if you can't surivive a stumble onto carpet, maybe it's time to die.
Honestly, I think our fetish for extending all life, regardless of quality, is starting to get way out of hand.
2001 A Nursing Home Oddesy (Score:2)
Dave: No HAL, I am having a stroke and falling down. Can you get medical assistance?
HAL: I'm afraid I can't do that Dave.
Thanks for the mental image (Score:2)
The carpet can gather a wide range of information about a person's condition; from biomechanical to chemical sensing of body fluids,
Cleanup on aisle 5 .....
Hadda be said. (Score:2)
Hey...
NICE CARPET!!
Product idea: the "coming home drunk" doormat! (Score:2)
Identifies a drunken gait and tells you to go sleep in the garage tonight.
Thus, your wife doesn't have to stay up waiting for you.
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This comment is not warranted even coming from someone who has only read the Slashdot headline before responding.
You might want to familiarize yourself with the definitions of the words "detect" and "prevent".
If you detect something, it is generally too late to prevent it.