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Funded Projects › HORIZON

SASICU · Improving patient outcomes and reducing cognitive load of clinical staff in intensive care through medical-device interoperability and an open and secure IT ecosystem

HORIZONStatus: SIGNED1 October 202330 September 2026EU funding €8,808,923Call HORIZON-JU-IHI-2022-03-single-stage

Over the decades, technical developments have resulted in a variety of different medical devices that dominate today's intensive care work environment. Beside all the clinical capabilities and benefits these technologies provide, devices also contribute to an increasing complexity in care. Using technology stresses the cognitive strain put on healthcare providers in critical care. Combined with a big lack of clinical staff the complexity leads to an enormous workload.To tackle these challenges the consortium consisting of four Universities and their clinics and four industrial partners plans to demonstrate the benefits in clinical outcomes and workflow efficiency through standardized, bi-directional interoperability of medical devices based on the new standard ISO/IEEE11073 SDC. During the project SDC solutions will be provided for different use-cases to reduce the quantity of alarms around the patient bed and securely distribute them to the responsible caregiver, allowing to keep the alarms silent at the bedside. Furthermore, algorithms shall be provided to analyse the root cause and urgency of an alarm. The latter is supposed to support in decision making whether immediate action is necessary. The IT infrastructure and algorithms will be evaluated in four different clinics. In addition, AI-based pattern recognition will used for early detection of patient deterioration in order to prevent negative long-term outcomes and prolonged ICU stay.Key deliverable will be a Targeted Alarm System (TAS) including several IT tools on the industrial side and study reports on the effectiveness of the TAS from the clinical partners. Realising this, a standardised IT-solution for monitoring ICU patients should be the next step after the project. On the long run it is intended to reduce alarms at ICUs significantly, decrease stress for patients and care takers and as result enhance the quality of intensive care. New technologies for data analytics will be developed and clinically tested to enable more reliable and individualised clinical decision support. Positive results and developments in this ICU-centred project may also be transferred to other areas in the patient care workflow.

Consortium · 12 organisations

coordinator

DRAGERWERK AG & CO KGAA

DE · €3,687,740

participant

MEDIZINISCHE UNIVERSITAET WIEN

AT · €924,265

participant

BETTER CARE SL

ES · €282,150

participant

ASCOM UMS SRL

IT · €1,695,625

participant

FUNDACIO DE RECERCA CLINIC BARCELONA-INSTITUT D INVESTIGACIONS BIOMEDIQUES AUGUST PI I SUNYER

ES · €488,639

participant

UNIVERSITAIR MEDISCH CENTRUM UTRECHT

NL · €777,956

participant

UNIVERSITAT POLITECNICA DE CATALUNYA

ES · €100,000

thirdParty

Ascom (Nederland) BV

NL

thirdParty

ASCOM (SWEDEN) AB

SE

thirdParty

HOSPITAL CLINIC DE BARCELONA

ES

participant

ERASMUS UNIVERSITAIR MEDISCH CENTRUM ROTTERDAM

NL · €852,548

associatedPartner

B. BRAUN MELSUNGEN AKTIENGESELLSCHAFT

DE

View the official record on CORDIS →

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Source: CORDIS, Publications Office of the European Union. Global Research Partnerships surfaces open EU research data to help you find collaborators; we are not affiliated with the European Union.