“Dispatcher, Can You Help Me? A Woman Is Giving Birth”. A Pilot Study of Remote Video Assistance with Smart Glasses
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MDPI
Materia
Technology Wearable Telemedicine Midwifery Natural childbirth Lifeguard Smart glasses Emergencies
Date
2022-12-30Referencia bibliográfica
Aranda-García, S... [et al.]. “Dispatcher, Can You Help Me? AWoman Is Giving Birth”. A Pilot Study of Remote Video Assistance with Smart Glasses. Sensors 2023, 23, 409. [https://doi.org/10.3390/s23010409]
Résumé
Smart glasses (SG) could be a breakthrough in emergency situations, so the aim of this
work was to assess the potential benefits of teleassistance with smart glasses (SG) from a midwife
to a lifeguard in a simulated, unplanned, out-of-hospital birth (OHB). Thirty-eight lifeguards were
randomized into SG and control (CG) groups. All participants were required to act in a simulated
imminent childbirth with a maternal–fetal simulator (PROMPT Flex, Laerdal, Norway). The CG acted
autonomously, while the SG group was video-assisted by a midwife through SG (Vuzix Blade, New
York, NY, USA). The video assistance was based on the OHB protocol, speaking and receiving images
on the SG. The performance time, compliance with the protocol steps, and perceived performance with
the SG were evaluated. The midwife’s video assistance with SG allowed 35% of the SG participants to
perform the complete OHB protocol. No CG participant was able to perform it (p = 0.005). All OHB
protocol variables were significantly better in the SG group than in the CG (p < 0.05). Telemedicine
through video assistance with SG is feasible so that a lifeguard with no knowledge of childbirth
care can act according to the recommendations in a simulated, unplanned, uncomplicated OHB.
Communication with the midwife by speaking and sending images to the SG is perceived as an
important benefit to the performance.