Background
The human body is like a machine. As people get older, their organs gradually age and health problems become more prevalent. Paying attention to self-care is one type of preventative care but, with the rise of big data, people may also be able to use real-time monitoring and alerts to nip problems in the bud before they become serious.
In the distant (and not so distant) past, if we wanted to check our health we had to go to a hospital or a professional physical examination clinic. This could be quite time consuming and troublesome. As technology develops, however, the monitoring of some health indicators has become increasingly convenient. Wearable technology for monitoring and detection wearables such as bracelets (which can record your heartbeat, temperature, activity levels, and various other indicators) have quickly gained in popularity. Based on current market trends and technological development, there is good reason to believe that there will continue to be more and more of these type of devices for conducting real-time health checks.
In recent years, professional institutions, such as hospitals or nursing homes, have seen a trend in the continued use of smart wearables for civilian health monitoring as well as health checks. This means that wearables may soon be produced with more sensors and more capabilities, including video and spatial analysis. Some common uses of these smart wearables include:
1.Monitoring a person's recorded movements, and raising an alert if the monitored person remains static for an extended period of time.
2.Raising an alert if the monitored person stays in bed for over 12 hours.
3.Raising an alert if the monitored person kneels, stoops, or falls over and remains at a height less than 40 cm for a period greater than 5 minutes (no alert given if there are people around). This may indicate the presence of hypertension in patients.
4.Raising an alert if a person or persons stays in a small, confined space (such as a restroom stall) for over 30 minutes.
Multiple sensors are provided for collecting data about the above situations.
Architecture
Data traffic is divided into 5 parts:
1.Data collection (from sensors)
2.Data conversion (formatting, stateful conversion)
Optional step, data conversion is aimed at making the identification and processing of data easier, and there are three methods available for conducting real time data conversion.
a.Define a conversion rule in a database's UDF, and execute real-time conversion according to a trigger, or when the rule is being loaded.
b.Define a conversion rule in a database's UDF, and execute conversion by means of pipeline Transforms.
c.Execute conversion in an application layer, and re-load the converted data.
3.Define rules.
Alert rules are defined, for example, as mentioned above: An alert will be given when a man stays in a small space (such as the restroom) for over 30 minutes.
In order to simplify access interfaces, the alert rules may be defined in a database's UDF and presented via a view.
4.Real-time rule query.
Inquire the defined rules and give alerts.
5.Alert.
Optimization Methods
1.A data record (one record may be comprised of multidimensional attributes such as height, location and heartbeat) may be calculated on multiple rule dimensions. For example, an alert rule regarding heart rate and an alert rule regarding location.
The most common optimization method is to reduce the amount of data scanning, and a similar optimization method is also applied to the 9.6 kernel layer.
However, this case is more complicated because different rules can result in different recording ranges. For example, an alert (probably containing thousands of records) may be given after a person stays in bed for 12 hours in the spatial dimension, but as for the height dimension, an alert is required after only 5 minutes.
2.Data from the same sensor is stored separately in order to reduce data scanning costs. That is, each sensor has a table. For similar optimization methods, you can refer to
3.Because there is no need to keep all the records for the alert, a rotation method can be used to export the history data to the OSS external table. (You can make a query when you need to check details, or you can directly connect to HybridDB for PostgreSQL to conduct analysis when a huge number of analyses are needed)
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4.Use Dynamic StreamCompute rules to reduce calculated amount. For example, triggering a corresponding rule when the user enters a certain status, such as "Trigger operation of a StreamCompute rule for a restroom space after the user enters a restroom."
Demo
Taking this for our example, we'll explain how an alert is given:
An alert will be given when a man stays in a small space (such as the restroom) for over 30 minutes.
The DEMO is not comprehensive and does not take optimization factors into consideration.
Create a table
Generate data
Define rules
An alert will be given when a person stays in a small, confined space (such as the restroom stall) for over 30 minutes.
Define a coordinate interval system for each restroom stall and monitor the users. When a user enters a stall, start measuring the time spent in that particular coordinate.
For geometric operations, you can refer to
https://www.postgresql.org/docs/10/static/functions-geometry.html
or
http://postgis.net/documentation/
Use UDF to define rules, and output a JSON.
For example, 1 represents an elderly resident's sensor ID, the Box in the middle represents the interval range of a restroom, and the third parameter is duration.
When it is detected that the person enters a static object space requiring monitoring (e.g., bed or restroom), the rule above is triggered and a query is executed according to the rule.
In fact, the sensor may not upload relative coordinates, but directly upload the unique identifier of the static object (restroom, bed,...). All static objects are numbers that are provided with corresponding sensors, capable of sensing the existence of monitored patients in their space and real time reporting their monitoring data to staff or nurses.
This is an even more simple, and also more elegant practice, because even something as simple as interval judgments will not be needed. The disadvantage, however, is that the resident or patient cannot be monitored after he or she leaves the monitored location, and monitoring can only rely on wearable sensors on the person's body after this time.
Summary for the two models:
- Light terminal, heavy server.
The terminal capability is weak and basically only involves data collection. All computation is completed at the server.
- Heavy terminal, light server.
The terminal capability is strong and involves data collection and some data computing capabilities. Also, a layer of static terminals (e.g., beds and restrooms) is added in the building and is linked with the patients (sensors) in this space so as to report more precise judgment data.
Query rules
Output statuses of all users.
For example, inquire motion statuses of sensor equipped people 1-100 in the restroom space.
Alert
If there is a record returned, give an alert.
For PostgreSQL, asynchronous messages are a very interesting feature which can be used for asynchronous alerts.
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If you use pipelinedb, you may also choose the real-time alert function of transform.
http://docs.pipelinedb.com/continuous-transforms.html#built-in-transform-triggers
Motion dashboard
Track query, involving the length of time the elderly residents stay in each and every monitored place. If there are multiple records in a same place, only retain two pieces of the records (the arrival time and departure time) when drawing a dashboard.
The method is as follows:
Introduction to optimization 1
An optimization to IO amplification is mentioned above, where data of all sensors is stored separately in order to completely eliminate the problem of IO amplification. Let's see the performance after IO is eliminated:
Compared to a previous time of 11ms, the time required for a query is decreased to 0.6ms.
Summary
As a typical case in larger health care, nursing homes involve a huge amount of spatial data and time data, and a large number of rules. A powerful database is needed to support the nursing homes, otherwise all the data must be transported to an APP layer for processing, which is not efficient.
PostgreSQL can well support applications in real-time detection, health reporting, track query and other scenarios for nursing home residents, and historical sensor data is linked to HybridDB for PostgreSQL by means of OSS, to satisfy the requirements for one-stop alert and analysis.
References
Pan Jinlian Changes the World - PostgreSQL News and Views Event Analysis Application
Real-Time Conversion in Data Loading - Trigger, Rule
PostgreSQL Data rotate Use Introduction - Cover History Data by Time