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posted by janrinok on Thursday March 06 2014, @05:16PM   Printer-friendly
from the How-do-I-feel? dept.

Papas Fritas writes:

"Elizabeth Howell reports at Space.com that a Canadian team exploring Antarctica this month is testing Astroskin, a garment that fits over a person's upper body and is embedded with wireless sensors. The eight crew members of the the XPAntarctik expedition, who have vowed to use no motorized vehicles during their trek, are spending 45 days in a previously unexplored region of the continent and beaming their medical information back to the University of Quebec at Montreal while wearing Astroskin. Doctors can see each explorers' vital signs, including blood pressure, blood oxygen levels, heart rate, breathing rate, and skin temperature, as well as how well the they are sleeping and how they are moving. "The great thing about this technology is since it's wireless, it can be monitored at a distance," says CSA chief medical officer Raffi Kuyumijian. "People who live in remote communities, for example, will have an easy access to a doctor. They can have these shirts on them all the time. It can trigger alarms if something wrong is happening, and alert the doctors following at a distance." The Canadian team has not indicated when Astroskin could fly in space, but says it could be used on the International Space Station during future missions."

 
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  • (Score: 2, Funny) by skullz on Thursday March 06 2014, @07:02PM

    by skullz (2532) on Thursday March 06 2014, @07:02PM (#12130)
    Okay, I see this as awesome and cool and something Google or Microsoft will get their hands on soon (except the ENTIRE torso, Microsoft) but...


    People who live in remote communities, for example, will have an easy access to a doctor ... It can trigger alarms if something wrong is happening, and alert the doctors following at a distance.


    Regarding monitoring with health issues remotely would only be useful if there was actually someone near by who knew what to do when something went wrong and had the tools. Say, at a hospital, clinic, or medical helicopter. Which isn't remote monitoring.

    So you slap on monitoring shirt on Ol Grandpa with a heart condition and send him back out to his cabin in the woods he grew from the very rock himself and... what? Monitor his heart attack in real time while eating Cheetos? Call him up and say "yeah, you probably are going to die. Burn anything you don't want your family to see"?
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  • (Score: 1) by rts008 on Thursday March 06 2014, @07:28PM

    by rts008 (3001) on Thursday March 06 2014, @07:28PM (#12145)

    Yeah, that struck me as a poor example of uses for this also, for those very reasons.
    Adding to that, how will they afford the shirts?
    Yeah, right!

    However, I could see the advantages to 'linking' this shirt to an astronaut's suit, and have the suit controls respond appropriately to the shirt sensors.
    Similar to a lot of sci-fi 'power armor' with an AI monitoring the 'pilot' and taking corrective action to protect/save the 'pilot'.

    I would expect this is one of the expected uses of this tech eventually, it's obvious to me, and I suspect that most of the people working on this are a little brighter than me.