Incontinence detection apparatus

US10159607B2 · US · B2

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-10159607-B2
Application numberUS-201715708589-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB2
Filing dateSep 19, 2017
Priority dateNov 16, 2015
Publication dateDec 25, 2018
Grant dateDec 25, 2018

How to read this patent

A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.

  1. Title

    What the patent document calls the invention.

  2. Abstract

    A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.

  3. Assignees and inventors

    Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.

  4. Key dates

    Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.

  5. First independent claim

    The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.

  6. CPC / IPC classifications

    Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.

  7. Citations and related patents

    Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.

Abstract

Official abstract text for this publication.

An incontinence detection system monitors an area for moisture events and wirelessly transmits moisture-related information to one or more notification devices. The system has a pad that includes a substrate and one or more sensors supported by the substrate. The sensor(s) emit wireless signals indicative of the moisture-related information. A sensor event communication system forwards the sensor signals to another device, such as a notification device. Portions of the system are included in a patient support apparatus, such as a bed.

First claim

Opening claim text (preview).

What is claimed is: 1. A patient support apparatus comprising a frame including a patient support deck having a plurality of deck sections, a first deck section of the plurality of deck sections being movable relative to at least a second deck section, a mattress supported by the patient support deck, the mattress having a portion that moves with the first deck section, an incontinence detection pad for placement atop the mattress, the incontinence detection pad having a passive radio frequency identification (RFID) tag, a reader coupled to the frame and operable to read data from the RFID tag, a first antenna coupled to an upper surface of the first deck section to move therewith, and a second antenna coupled to an upper surface of the second deck section, wherein the first and second antenna are communicatively coupled with the reader, wherein the RFID tag is excited by energy emitted from at least one of the first and second antenna through the mattress and data from the RFID tag of the incontinence pad is reflected back to at least one of the first and second antennae through the mattress, wherein the incontinence detection pad further comprises a top sheet made of a fluid permeable material, a backsheet comprising a first layer of fluid impermeable material, a conductive ink pattern provided on the first layer and configured to form a first electrode trace and a second electrode trace, and an absorbent core situated between the top sheet and the backsheet, wherein the RFID tag is attached to the first layer and has electrical contacts that couple to the respective first and second electrode traces, wherein wetness bridging between the first and second electrode traces is detectable by the RFID tag in response to the RFID tag being excited by external energy from the first antenna or the second antenna or both. 2. The patient support apparatus of claim 1 , wherein the patient support deck has a first side extending in a longitudinal dimension of the patient support apparatus and a second side extending in the longitudinal dimension of the patient support apparatus, wherein the incontinence detection pad is configured so that, when the incontinence detection pad is properly oriented on the mattress, the RFID tag is closer to the first side of the patient support deck than the second side; and wherein the first and second antennae are each positioned closer to the first side of the patient support deck than the second side. 3. The patient support apparatus of claim 2 , wherein the frame has a head end and a foot end, the incontinence detection pad is generally quadrilateral in shape, and the incontinence detection pad has indicia indicating that a first edge of the quadrilateral should be oriented toward the head end of the frame. 4. The patient support apparatus of claim 2 , wherein the frame has a head end and a foot end, the incontinence detection pad is generally quadrilateral in shape, and the incontinence detection pad has indicia indicating that a first edge of the quadrilateral should be oriented toward the foot end of the frame. 5. The patient support apparatus of claim 1 , wherein the first and second deck sections each have a hole therethrough and further comprising a first cable coupling the first antenna to the reader and a second cable coupling the second antenna to the reader, the first cable being routed through the hole of the first deck section, and the second cable being routed through the hole of the second deck section. 6. The patient support apparatus of claim 1 , wherein the second deck section is movable relative to a third deck section and the third deck section is situated between the first and second deck sections. 7. The patient support apparatus of claim 6 , wherein the first deck section is arranged to support a torso of a patient located on the mattress, the second deck section is arranged to support thighs of the patient located on the mattress, and the third deck section is arranged to support a buttocks of the patient located on the mattress. 8. The patient support apparatus of claim 6 , wherein a first gap is defined between the first deck section and the third deck section, wherein a second gap is defined between the second deck section and the third deck section, and further comprising a first cable coupling the first antenna to the reader and a second cable coupling the second antenna to the reader, the first cable being routed through the first gap and the second cable being routed through the second gap. 9. The patient support apparatus of claim 1 , wherein the frame has a head end and a foot end and further comprising an indicator unit attached to the frame adjacent the foot end, the indicator unit being signaled by the reader to provide a visual indication that the incontinence detection pad has detected incontinence. 10. The patient support apparatus of claim 1 , wherein the indicator unit comprises a light that is illuminated a first color in response to the incontinence detection pad detecting wetness, the light is illuminated a second color when the incontinence detection pad is in communication with the reader and the incontinence detection pad has not detected wetness, and the light is illuminated a third color when the reader is not in communication with the incontinence detection pad. 11. The patient support apparatus of claim 10 , wherein the first color is amber or yellow, the second color is green, and the third color is white. 12. The patient support apparatus of claim 1 , wherein the first deck section includes a stationary portion and a translating portion that translates relative to the stationary portion as the first deck section is raised and lowered relative to at least one other portion of the frame and wherein the first antenna is coupled to the translating portion of the first deck section. 13. The patient support apparatus of claim 1 , further comprising an output port that is communicatively coupled to the reader, the frame having a head end and a foot end, and the output port is located adjacent the head end of the frame. 14. The patient support apparatus of claim 13 , wherein the frame includes a base frame and an upper frame that supports the patient support deck for upward and downward movement relative to the base frame, the reader is coupled to the upper frame and the output port is coupled to the base frame. 15. The patient support apparatus of claim 1 , further comprising bed circuitry coupled to the frame and operable to control bed functions, the bed circuitry including an output port through which bed data is transmitted, and wherein the reader is coupled to the bed circuitry, wherein the reader sends to the bed circuitry detection information that indicates whether the incontinence detection pad has detected wetness or has not detected wetness, and wherein the bed circuitry transmits the detection information through the output port of the bed circuitry. 16. The patient support apparatus of claim 1 , further comprising a controller that communicates an incontinence event detected by the incontinence detection pad with one or more remote alert systems in response to a signal from the reader that the incontinence event took place. 17. A patient support apparatus comprising a frame including a patient support deck having a plurality of deck sections, a first deck section of the plurality of deck sections being movable relative to at least a second deck section, a mattress supported by the patient support deck, the mattress having a portion that moves with the first deck section, an incontinence detection pad for

Assignees

Inventors

Classifications

  • having an electronic device · CPC title

  • for the management or administration of healthcare resources or facilities, e.g. managing hospital staff or surgery rooms · CPC title

  • Testing the sensing arrangement, e.g. testing if a magnetic card reader, bar code reader, RFID interrogator or smart card reader functions properly (testing of electrical circuits G01R31/28) · CPC title

  • Detecting, measuring or recording for diagnosis by means of electric currents or magnetic fields; Measuring using microwaves or radio waves (measuring movement of the entire body or parts thereof A61B5/11; detecting, measuring or recording bioelectric or biomagnetic signals of the body or parts thereof A61B5/24) · CPC title

  • Built-in electrodes · CPC title

Patent family

Related publications grouped by family.

External sources

Frequently asked questions

Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.

What does patent US10159607B2 cover?
An incontinence detection system monitors an area for moisture events and wirelessly transmits moisture-related information to one or more notification devices. The system has a pad that includes a substrate and one or more sensors supported by the substrate. The sensor(s) emit wireless signals indicative of the moisture-related information. A sensor event communication system forwards the sens…
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Hill Rom Services Inc
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification A61F13/42. Mapped technology areas include Human Necessities.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue Dec 25 2018 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) (B2). Legal status and post-grant events are not shown on this page.
What related patents are in patentsdb?
We list 6 related publications on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).