Smart Pods Future Ambulance

Royal College of Art Helen Hamlyn Centre and Vehicle Design

Following on from Ambulance Design for Patient Safety, Roger Coleman of RCA and Sue Hignett of Loughborough University, proposed a new area of research to the EPSRC: meeting the longer-term challenges of taking healthcare to the patient as set out in the 2005 Department of Health report of that name. The EPSRC organised an intensive five-day workshop on the subject, which resulted in a number of new research collaborations. The Smart Pods project is one of these. It explores longer-term challenges in urgent and emergency healthcare delivery and offers radical and innovative solutions.

 

The Ambulance Service has changed significantly in recent years. Paramedics and nurses have received additional and advanced training to become Emergency Care Practitioners (ECPs), qualified to assess, treat and discharge patients with urgent care problems in their local community, rather than simply taking them to a hospital Accident and Emergency Department for treatment. Research shows that ECPs are effective in their new role, reducing hospital visits and achieving high levels of patient satisfaction.

 

However, the equipment used by this new professional group has not evolved to match its capabilities, so 21st century urgent care is being delivered by 21st century professionals using 20th century technologies. By improving the equipment, vehicles and communications available to the ECPs, urgent care delivery could become still more successful. By taking the treatment to the patient in this way, there is the potential to reduce the number of wasted journeys and the number of attendees at hospital A&E departments, whilst improving Patient Safety and the well-being of staff.

 

Smart Pods is a two-year project that will research and put forward a number of outline design options for a multi-level system to respond to a range of 999, GP and other calls, typically to treat soft tissue injuries, minor head injuries, elderly falls, chest pain and minor respiratory illness. The multi-level Smart Pods could include: vehicle/docking systems, treatment (vehicle) units for a range of defined services, and portable treatment packages of equipment and consumables. A standardised system will help paramedics to respond quickly and efficiently when faced with major emergencies, and simplify procurement for healthcare trusts.

 

Research Partners

Academic partners include the Royal College of Art, Loughborough University and the Universities of Bath, Plymouth and the West of England. Collaborating NHS partners include University Hospital Bristol NHS Foundation Trust, University Hospital Leicester NHS Foundation Trust, BrisDoc, Leicestershire County and Rutland Primary Care NHS Trust, Great Western Ambulance Service NHS Trust and East Midlands Ambulance Service NHS Trust.

 

Exhibitions

Pioneers09, Olympia, London, 4 March 2009

Healthcare on the Move, Royal College of Art, London, 6–8 April 2009

NHS Innovation Expo, ExCel, London, 18–19 June 2009

 

Visit the Smart Pods website

 

Bikeoff Materials Resource

Design Against Crime, Innovation Centre

An online materials and manufacturing resource created in order to enable designers to get smart quick about the opportunities that materials offer. Knowledge about materials is essential to innovation in the 21st century, and innovative design in history has been led by astute focus on new materials and processes, or a rediscovery and recontextualisation of established materials and technologies.

 

Visit the online resource


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