Connected to the cloud at time of death: a case report.

IF 0.9 Q3 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Isabel Straw, Claire Kirkby, Preethi Gopinath
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Our case report provides the first clinical evaluation of autopsy practices for a patient death that occurs on the cloud. We question how autopsy practices may require adaptation for a death that presents via the 'Internet of Things', examining how existing guidelines capture data related to death which is no longer confined to the patient's body.

Case presentation: The patient was a British man in his 50s, who came to the attention of the medical team via an alert on the cloud-based platform that monitored his implanted cardioverter defibrillator (ICD). The patient had a background of congenital heart disease, with previous ventricular fibrillation cardiac arrest, for which the ICD had been implanted two years earlier. Retrospective analysis of the cloud data demonstrated a gradually decreasing nocturnal heart rate over the previous three months, falling to a final transmission of 24 beats per minute (bpm). In the patient post-mortem the ICD was treated as medical waste, structural tissue changes precluded the effective evaluation of device hardware, potential issues related to device software were not investigated and the cause of death was assigned to underlying heart failure. The documentation from the attending law enforcement officials did not consider possible digital causes of harm and relevant technology was not collected from the scene of death.

Conclusion: Through this patient case we explore novel challenges associated with digital deaths including; (1) device hardware issues (difficult extraction processes, impact of pathological tissue changes), (2) software and data limitations (impact of negative body temperatures and mortuary radio-imaging on devices, lack of retrospective cloud data analysis), (3) guideline limitations (missing digital components in autopsy instruction and death certification), and (4) changes to clinical management (emotional impact of communicating deaths occurring over the internet to members of family). We consider the implications of our findings for public health services, the security and intelligence community, and patients and their families. In sharing this report we seek to raise awareness of digital medical cases, to draw attention to how the nature of dying is changing through technology, and to motivate the development of digitally appropriate clinical practice.

死亡时与云连接:病例报告。
背景:我们的病例报告首次对发生在云端的患者死亡的尸检方法进行了临床评估。我们提出的问题是,对于通过 "物联网 "发生的死亡,尸检方法可能需要如何调整,并研究了现有指南如何捕捉与死亡有关的数据,而这些数据已不再局限于患者的身体:患者是一名 50 多岁的英国男子,医疗团队是通过监控其植入式心律转复除颤器(ICD)的云平台上的警报得知他的病情的。该患者有先天性心脏病背景,曾发生过心室颤动性心脏骤停,两年前为此植入了 ICD。对云数据的回顾性分析表明,在过去的三个月中,夜间心率逐渐下降,最后降至每分钟 24 次(bpm)。在患者的尸检中,ICD 被作为医疗废物处理,由于组织结构的变化,无法对设备硬件进行有效评估,与设备软件相关的潜在问题也未被调查,死因被归结为潜在的心力衰竭。主治执法人员提供的文件没有考虑可能的数字伤害原因,也没有从死亡现场收集相关技术:通过这个病例,我们探讨了与数字化死亡相关的新挑战,包括:(1)设备硬件问题(提取过程困难、病理组织变化的影响),(2)软件和数据限制(负体温和停尸房无线电成像对设备的影响、缺乏回顾性云数据分析),(3)指南限制(尸检指导和死亡证明中缺少数字化组件),以及(4)临床管理变化(通过互联网向家庭成员传达死亡信息对情绪的影响)。我们考虑了我们的研究结果对公共卫生服务、安全和情报部门以及患者及其家属的影响。通过分享本报告,我们希望提高人们对数字化医疗案例的认识,提请人们注意死亡的本质是如何通过技术发生变化的,并激励人们发展适合数字化的临床实践。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Medical Case Reports
Journal of Medical Case Reports Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
436
期刊介绍: JMCR is an open access, peer-reviewed online journal that will consider any original case report that expands the field of general medical knowledge. Reports should show one of the following: 1. Unreported or unusual side effects or adverse interactions involving medications 2. Unexpected or unusual presentations of a disease 3. New associations or variations in disease processes 4. Presentations, diagnoses and/or management of new and emerging diseases 5. An unexpected association between diseases or symptoms 6. An unexpected event in the course of observing or treating a patient 7. Findings that shed new light on the possible pathogenesis of a disease or an adverse effect
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