That has been the goal of Intel as well. I stumbled across an interesting design project using the Intel hardware, although I have absolutely no insight into whether this particular project has gone anywhere.mindy wrote:Hopefully the price will continue to go down so pulse oximeters will be more widely available.
From Wendy Ju's design portfolio: http://www-cdr.stanford.edu/~wendyju/portfolio.pdf
"The Intel Digital Health Pulse Oximeter Earring Project is a distributed health sensing application to provide persistent health monitoring. Pulse oximetry hardware clipped to the patients ear communicates over Bluetooth using compact Intel iMote technology to send data to the patient’s cell phone, which acts as a gateway for disseminating information to their personal computer, their dedicated health weblog or possibly to their doctor’s health server."
Note that the designer here envisions the patient as the primary user of the oximeter data, with the possibility of the "doctor" also accessing the data.
Regards,
Bill