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Science

Making Alarms More Musical Can Save Lives (scientificamerican.com) 47

Medical alarms don't have to be louder to be more effective. Scientific American: Beeping alarms in hospitals are a life-or-death matter -- but with so many going off all the time, medical professionals may experience alarm fatigue that impairs care. Researchers now report that changing an alarm's sound to incorporate properties of musical instruments can make it more helpful amid the din. Auditory alarms can sound up to 300 times a day per patient in U.S. hospitals, but only a small fraction require immediate action.

Data from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration suggest that alarm fatigue (including when clinicians turned off or forgot to restart alarms) and other alarm-related issues were linked to 566 deaths over five and a half years. After a typical day at the hospital, "I'd leave with beeping in my ears," says Vanderbilt University Medical Center anesthesiologist Joseph Schlesinger. He collaborated with Michael Schutz, a music cognition researcher at McMaster University in Ontario, to analyze how musical sounds could improve hospital alarms.

In 2015 Schutz and Schlesinger began examining musical qualities called timbres that might let softer sounds command attention from busy clinicians. They found that sounds with a "percussive" timbre, many of which contain short bursts of high-frequency energy -- such as wineglasses clinking -- stand out even at low volume. In contrast, loud, "flat" tones that lack high-frequency components, like a reversing truck's beep, get lost. The researchers have since conducted experiments in which participants evaluate different sounds and melodies for annoyance, detectability and recognizability. For a recent study detailed in Perioperative Care and Operating Room Management, the researchers played participants the same sequences of notes with varying timbres. They found the sounds that made these sequences least annoying, with no decrease in recall, were percussive and had complex, time-varied harmonic overtones (the many components within a single sound) like a xylophone's ping, rather than a few homogeneous ones like monotonous mechanical beeps.

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Making Alarms More Musical Can Save Lives

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  • Sure a nice tune would be more pleasant than beeeep beeeeep beeeeep.

    • That needs to be the one for after death is pronounced.

      Other ideas that come to mind are:

      * "You dropped a bomb on me" when a bedpan needs to be changed.

      *"Another one bites the dust" when CPR is in progress.

      *"Yours is an Empty Hope" by Nightwish for asystole.

      *" https://youtu.be/SlEfVukAPqs?s... [youtu.be] " "Refill" by Elle Varner with a loop of the chorus for an empty IV bag.

      *"Hurt" by Johnny Cash for pain medication requests.

      We could go on all day.

  • by Tavor ( 845700 ) on Tuesday February 20, 2024 @05:10PM (#64255492)
    This is what Toyota learned and implemented in their Georgetown, KY assembly plant over 30 years ago. Every device has a musical piece that it will play when something goes wrong, with some having different songs for different events. You can tell exactly how the plant is operating without even having to look - and there is a LOT going on there in a large space. Beeps would echo.
    • Every beep should have a different tone. You probably could tell more by listening to the chords they make when something goes seriously wrong.
    • by Roger W Moore ( 538166 ) on Tuesday February 20, 2024 @05:53PM (#64255612) Journal
      The old control room of the OPAL experiment at CERN used a similar, but different, idea. Star Trek the Next Generation was on at the time so the various alarms played different clips from the show. It worked too - a friend of mine was showing me around and demonstrated some of the clips. When he played Picard's "red alert, all hands to battle stations" clip the two guys on shift overheard it and came running in. I can't remember what it signified had failed but clearly something very bad since they were very relieved to hear it was just a demo and then asked us to stop playing around!
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      The Japanese have adopted this technique for all sorts of things. ATMs often play little tunes when they dispense money, for example. It might only be a few notes, but it's not a basic beep beep beep.

      At train stations they have tunes that play to warn you when the doors are closing, and every station has a different one.

      They also have audio cues for people with limited vision. Sometimes it's a basic "bing bong" doorbell type noise, emanating from a speaker near the exit, but some newer stations also have wh

      • I know at least two LG appliance that play short jingles (like 8-bit video games) for event notifications.
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Aye, my new Samsung washing machine plays a rather long tune when it finishes. I didn't get the WiFi version for obvious reasons, but I think I might be able to detect the end of wash tune with a microcontroller and MEMS microphone.

  • I use the "Chic-Chic-a-chic-kaw" bit from the song Oh Yeah by Yello as my message notification tone.

    * Easy to hear at low volume from a distance (through tinnitus). Surprisingly long distance (high tones with a smidge of beat)
    * Even if I don't hear it, others will and mention it.
    * Funny accidental conversation starter (if one is into that sort of thing)

    I tried one with the "Bueller" by Ben Stein (8 seconds long with the word repeated a second time), but that got annoying.

  • Something people will want to put a stop to.

    Anything by Nickelback comes to mind.

  • by ThurstonMoore ( 605470 ) on Tuesday February 20, 2024 @05:16PM (#64255502)

    Why not just do away with useless alarms?

    • Re:Why not (Score:5, Interesting)

      by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Tuesday February 20, 2024 @05:32PM (#64255558)

      Why not just do away with useless alarms?

      This was one of the lessons from the Three Mile Island [wikipedia.org] accident.

      To make it "extra safe", all the equipment was designed to alert the operators if there were any problems or anomalies, if something needed to be checked, or if data needed to be collected.

      Alarms and buzzers went off dozens of times a day. The operators learned to ignore them and taped muffling over the speakers in some parts of the plant.

      Then, when a real problem happened, it was just another alarm and was ignored.

    • Thereâ(TM)s probably some pure organization problem: not all the equipment is going to even be from the same vendor, so coordination of different alarm sounds for different purposes or severity is going to be a challenge; and then thereâ(TM)s the asymmetrical incentives: everyone knows that alarm fatigue is bad, in a vague theoretical way, and that we should be minimizing noise to avoid distracted mistakes; but being the guy who signed off on disabling the cardiac anomaly beeper because itâ(T
  • Is this study actually telling us anything about the sounds, or just about response to novel sounds vs. overwhelmingly habituated ones?

    I donâ(TM)t doubt that novel musical tones got better response that that-spurious-out-of-range-alarm-thatâ(TM)s-never-worth-checking; but would that remain the case if you started hammering people with spurious musical alarms?
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by dosun88888 ( 265953 ) on Tuesday February 20, 2024 @05:25PM (#64255532)

    The problem isn't the specific noise that the alarm makes, it's summed up in the article itself.

    "Auditory alarms can sound up to 300 times a day per patient in U.S. hospitals, but only a small fraction require immediate action."

    When everything is built to try to notify everyone of everything all the time, well, yeah people are going to start ignoring them. That makes perfect sense. And you can't fault someone for ignoring the one notification that actually meant something amongst the billion that meant nothing.

    And as soon as they figure out the optimal sound to actually get someone's attention, every other alarm will immediately copy it.

    How about some regulations around when alarms and notifications in general can be used? I feel like I'm under a constant barrage of notification harassment from literally every company out there, and I don't even work in a hospital.

    • by tsqr ( 808554 )

      The problem isn't the specific noise that the alarm makes, it's summed up in the article itself.

      "Auditory alarms can sound up to 300 times a day per patient in U.S. hospitals, but only a small fraction require immediate action."

      That caught my eye as well, and it strikes me as gross exaggeration - that's more often than every 5 minutes for each patient. That's almost guaranteed to be a broken piece of equipment, and that would be hauled away pretty quickly because nurses won't put up with that kind of constant interruption. I've spent more than my share of time confined to a hospital bed, and I honestly don't recall many alarms that didn't legitimately call for immediate action. IV line blocked? Probably don't want to let that wait

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Not just hospitals. People tend to ignore most alarms outside, because there's always some shoplifting siren going off, or a car reversing, or some other thing they don't care about.

  • Good games have a nice balance between background music and noises and things that should draw your attention in a certain way. Iâ(TM)ve got my Prometheus alerts at work with a little Python script to play different game sounds depending on severity and job whether I should pay more or less attention to it. From Minecraft, Doom, Half Life and Among Us, plenty of good recognizable sounds that remind you whether you should answer, avoid or purely informational.

  • It's all fun and games 'til the boss fight music starts.

  • by MpVpRb ( 1423381 ) on Tuesday February 20, 2024 @05:45PM (#64255590)

    Back up alarms were supposed to make the jobsite safer
    With lots of trucks and forklifts, alarms are constant
    It becomes part of the background noise and is tuned out

  • by nealric ( 3647765 ) on Tuesday February 20, 2024 @05:45PM (#64255592)

    All of the beeping and alarms can make life a living hell for patients in the hospital. Any that aren't in a coma are going to be severely sleep deprived from the constant din (in addition to being woken up several times a night for rounds).

    Seems like there has to be a better solution that just making the alarms more noticeable.

  • Car factories have been using musical error codes for decades. The reason is that you can't always see the big error status boards from everywhere in the factory, and you can't hear voice announcements over the general noise. To this day I'm pretty sure the PLCs use MIDI files, though I think they can do MP3s as well.

  • Hey, it's 2024, we can have software supervise irregular patterns and use legit TTS to talk to nurses.

    Yeah, everybody is trained on nonstop sine wave beeps, but only because that's what was available fifty years ago.

    Nothing wrong with also having a switch to turn on a monitor speaker for diligent observation but the overnight orchestra of beeping gear just becomes background noise with only tempo for aural information.

    Mentally taxing and just not a necessary limitation anymore.

  • On those rare occasions when I dine in at fast food restaurants, I sit as far away from the counter as possible so I don't have to hear beeps. I feel sorry for anybody who has to work with that. I'm assuming of course that it won't all just go away and be replaced by robots... but the 'bots will probably beep at their tenders unless they wise up to this.

  • by Tony Isaac ( 1301187 ) on Tuesday February 20, 2024 @06:31PM (#64255708) Homepage

    Message in a Bottle is an episode where the two EMH characters manage to place themselves on the bridge of a Federation ship that is under attack. They are alone, trying to figure out how to run things, when they start hearing beeping sounds. It's one of the best comedies in a series that can be dry at times. I wish I could find a link to a video clip, but this is the best I could do.

    https://memory-alpha.fandom.co... [fandom.com]

  • Those things go off for all kinds of reasons that should not warrant an alarm. This only adds to the alarm fatigue, making it more likely that the one-in-100 truly serious alarm will be overlooked.

    This is the same situation, though typically not as dangerous, when it comes to all kinds of software error logs. Too much noise, not enough substance.

  • by Daina.0 ( 7328506 ) on Tuesday February 20, 2024 @07:11PM (#64255792)

    I use the musical alarms for various things too. One problem is that sometimes one will sound and I pause and want to listen to the music and let it finish. Wait, what was that alarm for?

  • I remember this music usually has comments posted underneath about how it should replace fire alarms:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
  • Bells? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by SteelCamel ( 7612342 ) on Wednesday February 21, 2024 @08:32AM (#64256778)

    So the best sound for an an alarm is "percussive with complex, time-varied harmonic overtones (the many components within a single sound) like a xylophone's ping". So, a bell then? Which have been used for alerting for centuries.

As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain, and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality. -- Albert Einstein

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