This invention relates to a device for monitoring activity. More specifically it relates to a device for monitoring the activity of a person and notifying that person, or another person, of a specified duration or type of activity or inactivity.[0001]
The present invention finds a particular use in the prevention of deep vein thrombosis (DVT), which is often caused by extended periods of inactivity, and it will be primarily described with reference thereto. However, other uses for the device are anticipated which do not relate to the prevention of DVT, so the application is not limited thereto. Examples of specific other uses will be described later in the specification.[0002]
Deep vein thrombosis is a condition resulting from the lack of blood flow in the veins and the condition is related primarily, but not exclusively, to the legs. Blood flow tends to slow down or stop when there is prolonged inactivity, especially when seated, as would happen on a plane or any long journey in a cramped space. More specifically deep vein thrombosis occurs when a clot forms in the deep veins within the calf or thigh muscles. It is usually a spontaneous condition that occurs in people especially at risk, such as those with heart disease, those who smoke or take alcohol and those that are generally overweight. The elderly in nursing homes may be particularly prone, as they tend to be liable to sit for long periods of inactivity.[0003]
Any period of prolonged inactivity can generally trigger the condition and medical research suggests that those over forty years of age are at ever increasing risk. Warning signs are pain and tenderness in the leg muscles, redness and swelling of the skin. If the blood clot moves to the lung (a pulmonary embolus), then breathing difficulties can occur. The clot travelling on to the heart can cause death or if it travels to the brain a stroke is a possibility. There are well-documented cases of people suffering from this condition during long haul plane journeys and there have been some deaths attributed to DVT. In recent times a number of airline passengers have taken legal action against airline companies relating to this condition, and some companies are now putting warnings on their tickets.[0004]
The more cramped the condition, such as would occur in the economy class area of a plane, the more likely a person is to suffer from DVT, but recent medical research shows that the condition can occur to any class of traveller who does insufficient exercise.[0005]
It is to be expected that on a long haul flight lasting several hours that people will sleep for extended periods of this time. This cannot be prevented on an individual basis and this is where a problem may arise. Furthermore, due to the cramped conditions, people may at other times, for one reason or another remain essentially motionless. This inactivity reduces the blood flow in the legs and the potential problem of DVT becomes a factor.[0006]
Regular use of the legs during a journey dramatically reduces the risk of DVT. However, the airline operators have no way of ensuring that suitable exercise is done by their passengers, despite the fact that the health and safety of those passengers is at least partially the airline operator's responsibility. The problem of DVT is not limited to airline travel, but is also encountered in other forms of transport such as coaches and trains wherein prolonged periods of sedentary inactivity occur.[0007]
At present, the onus maybe on travel operators to ensure that their paying passengers do not get DVT. However, the present type of traveller on long haul flights will clearly fit many of the conditions associated with DVT and as such can expose the travel operators to significant risk of negligence claims.[0008]
This present invention aims to provide a mechanism by which the motion or lack of motion of a person may be monitored and remedial action taken by the person or another person if deemed appropriate. In the context of DVT prevention it aims to reduce the risk of DVT occurring and move responsibility from the travel operators to the individual passenger by providing them with a device that will warn of lack of sufficient and suitable movement/exercise of the limbs.[0009]
According to the present invention there is provided a device for monitoring the activity of a user, comprising a carrier for positioning adjacent a user, a motion sensor mounted on the carrier and adapted to detect the user performing a predefined type or amount of motion, a timer connected to the motion sensor so as to be reset should the predefined motion be detected, and an alarm connected to the timer for triggering thereby, should the timer count a preset time period without being reset.[0010]
It is preferred that the timer and the alarm are also mounted on the carrier, as this allows convenient integration and construction of the device.[0011]
As mentioned above there are other uses for the device according to the present invention, which make use of its ability to monitor and report the lack of or type of activity detected by the device. These include the monitoring of a driver to check that he/she has not drifted off to sleep while driving a vehicle such as a long haul truck. For example, a device could be mounted on the leg of a driver (or on one of the pedals) and failure to regularly use the leg (or press the pedal) would set off the alarm. This could wake a driver or prevent them going to sleep.[0012]
People who have lost the use of a limb are encourage to move the limb by way of rehabilitation using others as this can encourage the recovery of the limb. The problem is that such limbs can be forgotten about by the patient due to their lack of nerve sensation - therefore meaning that the exercise is not carried out, and worse that the mental concept of the limb diminishes. A further use of the present invention could be the connection to the limb of a person who has lost the use thereof, to remind the person of the inactivity of that limb.[0013]
The device may be used to compliment other types of DVT prevention equipment. It is known to use an air bag exercise apparatus which can be used by a seated person to reduce risk of developing DVT. This apparatus relies on the user to undertaken the exercise and so does not ensure that they are reminded to do so. The present invention also provides an exercise apparatus provided with an activity monitoring device as previously described which is adapted to monitor the correct use of the exercise apparatus and sound the alarm if insufficient or incorrect use is made of the apparatus. The apparatus could be a two chamber inflatable device, and this could also be provided with pump for inflation thereof.[0014]
The device can monitor the inactivity of a specific limb and in order to monitor such activity it is essential that the sensor be positioned so that it may detect the movements of that limb. It is preferred that the sensor is held against the user and more particularly the limb of a user, and so the carrier may include an attachment means to permit removable attachment of the device to a user. Those attachment means may take any suitable form, but for attachment to a limb, they may comprise a strap that is adapted to pass around that limb. Such a strap may be made such that it may be stretched to pass over the hand or foot and then grip the limb once fastened. Alternatively the strap may be in two parts, the free end of each part being provided with means for inter attachment, such as a two part hook and loop fasteners (for example that sold under the trade name Velcro®), or a buckle. Releasable adhesive could also be used to fix the device to a limb or clothing.[0015]
The motion sensor may be adapted to detect various patterns of movement, and different intensities of motion. This allows the device to discern between different types of activity and only to reset the timer if the correct activity is performed. This prevents the resetting of the timer by insufficient or inappropriate movement. The type of motion that the motion sensor is adapted to monitor may be preset during manufacture, as may the time period before activation of the alarm. Such manufactured settings could adapt the device to a particular type of use. Alternatively, the type of predetermined motion and indeed the preset time period may be adjusted to allow the device to be swapped between different uses. This adjustment may be conducted by reprogramming the devices between different modes, using controls on the device or by control remotely from the device.[0016]
The alarm must be able to notify the user or another person or persons of the period of inactivity, and may therefore dependent on the end use take several different forms. The alarm may include at least one of an audible signal generator such as a speaker, a light source such as a flashing LED, a vibrator such as is used in mobile phones and a transmitter connected to a remote notification system. Such a transmitter might be used when it is additionally, or alternatively, desired to notify a person other than the user (wearer) of the device.[0017]
To integrate the motion sensor, timer and alarm it is preferred that the device includes a controller (such as a microprocessor) adapted to receive information from the timer and the motion sensor and to operate the alarm accordingly. This controller may include software and/or hardware that allow the reprogramming of the device for different operation. Indeed the timer, motion sensor and control may be integrated within a single, suitably programmed micro-controller. Means for transmitting and receiving data may be included, either as part of the alarm, or in addition to the alarm, and these can allow remote control and monitoring of the device.[0018]
The carrier on which the motion senor is mounted may comprise a mattress, and it may be adapted to monitor the movement of a person lying thereon. The alarm can be located remotely from the mattress so that the sleep pattern, or movement of a person on the mattress, may for example be monitored by a nurse, without the alarm disturbing that person or any other.[0019]
The device according to the present invention may in one embodiment find a particular application in the prevention of DVT, therefore it is preferred that the device is adapted for attachment to a leg of a passenger on a transportation vehicle. and the type of predetermined motion of the sensor and the preset time period of the timer are set so that the alarm is triggered if the leg is not exercised often enough to reduce the risk of deep vein thrombosis.[0020]
A further proposed use of the present invention is in the prevention of sleep by drivers of vehicles. Therefore the device may be adapted for attachment to a leg of a vehicle driver or to a pedal operated by that leg of the driver, and the type of predetermined motion and the preset time period of the timer may be set so that the alarm is triggered if the pedal is not regularly operated by the driver's leg.[0021]
The device may be adapted for attachment to a person who desires to correctly carry out a specific exercise. In such an embodiment, the type of predetermined motion may be set to the pattern generated by the correct completion of the specific exercise routine, and the preset time period of the timer is set so that the alarm is triggered if the exercise is not correctly performed at the requires frequency by the person wearing the device.[0022]
The device can be adapted for use in the monitoring of athletes and sporting animals. Several embodiments of the device could be provided on each limb of, for example, a racehorse and each would have a transmitter. The transmitter would provide details from the timer and the motion sensor of the type and regularity of the motion of those limbs, which data would be transmitted to a control unit provided with a recording medium such as a hard disc and a receiver. When used on a racehorse, the control unit could be mounted on the saddle, and the monitoring devices could be placed in boots attached to the ends of the racehorse legs.[0023]
In a more sophisticated version of the invention a microprocessor is used in conjunction with the earlier agreed principles of operation. The microprocessor will be programmed to allow for the following sequence to happen.[0024]
A wearer will be given an alert on activation of the device. The alert might comprise the flashing of the LED or a buzz from a vibration motor. The microprocessor will allow for the LED to flash in time with an exact exercise being achieved, in so doing it in effect trains the wearer to visually do a Specific regime of exercise. The LED will be allowed to flash every fifteen seconds to show its wearer that it is functioning correctly.[0025]
In a further use of the LED, it could be that should the wearer refuse to do the exercise on any one or more period of monitoring, then the flash rate of the LED could be changed by the microprocessor to 2 flashes every fifteen seconds to indicate this. This has the function of alerting cabin staff in an airline that the wearer refused to do the agreed predetermined exercise regime of the airline.[0026]
The timer can monitor activity over suitable period such as fifty to sixty minutes and if insufficient/inappropriate exercise is detected in that period then it will cause three distinct buzzes of the vibration motor to warning a user to do the exercise regime.[0027]
On completion of the exercise e.g. 180 foot taps in four minutes then another buzz will be sent to the wearer via the vibration motor, indicate to the wearer that they can stop doing exercise. The device then resets its clock and continues to monitor for a further fifty or sixty minutes.[0028]