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Real-Life Baby Simulator

Pressure Sensors and Transducers Help Make Dummies More Life-Like

October 1, 2006

Electrical, computer, and biological engineering combine in creating baby-patient simulators for training new pediatricians. A new simulator incorporates microelectromechanical systems (MEMs) and transducers to sense the doctors' actions -- such as giving air or performing an intubation -- and make the dummy react like a real child would. Computer software allows pediatric intensivists to create different scenarios for the simulator's behavior.

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Science behind the news is funded by a generous grant from the NSF

BACKGROUND: Rush University Medical Center, along with other institutions, are using one of the first baby simulators to realistically train clinicians for what might occur in an actual crisis situation, without the risk of causing harm to these vulnerable young patients through trial and error. Simulator training increases patient safety without increasing patient risk. So the more training in a realistic setting that can be given, the less potential harm for patients in real settings while clinicians are trying to diagnose individual cases.

HOW IT WORKS: BabySim is shaped like a life-sized baby. It can blink, move its chest, cry, exhale and cough, among other movements. It functions much like the barcode systems used at supermarket checkout counters. External information is converted into electrical signals, causing the BabySim to react much like a normal baby would when, for example, given a certain type of medication. The simulator can also allow caregivers to perform clinical tasks like tracheal intubation, insertion of IVs or bladder catheters, and chest compressions, providing realistic clinical scenarios.

UNDER PRESSURE: Pressure sensors date back to the advent of the steam engine. They are still used to daily monitor the pressure of fluids in pipes, engines, hydraulics, or in nature to determine the depth of an ice pack, for example, of the density of a rock layer. The basic concept can also be adapted to determine the pressure of solids or gases. Most are about a cubic inch in size, but others are much, much smaller such as those used in microelectromechanical systems (MEMs). They use piezoresistance (PEE-zo resistance): pressure causes a material, like quartz, to conduct electricity; the intensity of the current corresponds to how much pressure is being applied. This charge is detected and recorded by a computer and displayed for analysis by scientists

WHAT ARE TRANSDUCERS: Transducers are electric devices that transform energy from one form into another, and they are used in a wide range of modern technology, including Geiger counters, electric motors, generators, pressure sensors, thermometers, antennae, light bulbs, and microphones, to name a few. For example, a microphone converts sound waves (mechanical energy) that strike its membrane into an electrical signal. A light bulb converts electrical energy into visible light. Electric motors convert electricity into kinetic energy to perform a given task, while a generator turns kinetic energy back into electrical energy, which can be used by electrical devices.

The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc., contributed to the information contained in the TV portion of this report.

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More information on this story

Paul Severin
Rush University Simulator Laboratory
Chicago, IL
Tel: 312-942-6194
Paul_J_Severin@Rush.edu
See a video of Dr. Severin from the Rush Web site

Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc.
IEEE
IEEE-USA
Pender McCarter
p.mccarter@ieee.org


© 2011 American Institute of Physics