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Children's Hospital of Georgia uses Philips' automated early detection and warning solution to improve pediatric deterioration

Press releases may be edited for formatting or style | March 25, 2020 Health IT Patient Monitors Pediatrics Telemedicine
Amsterdam, the Netherlands and Augusta, GA, U.S. – Royal Philips (NYSE: PHG, AEX: PHIA), a global leader in health technology, today announced that Children's Hospital of Georgia has adopted Philips' automated early detection and warning solution (IntelliVue GuardianSoftware) for pediatrics. This scalable solution, which could be comprised of a combination of patient monitoring, telehealth, predictive analytics software and services, enables quick identification of signals of clinical patient deterioration and triggers a warning notification to the hospital staff allowing faster response times.

With the implementation of the Philips system, Children's** saw a 75%* decrease in pediatric early warning scoring (PEWS) inaccuracies on its pediatric medicine floor and was able to eliminate inaccuracies on its pediatric surgery floor. In addition, the Pediatric Medicine floor saw an 80%* increase in pediatric emergency response team escalations, allowing clinical teams to provide timely, critical interventions for patients in need. Children's is part of Augusta University Health, a forward-thinking health system that was the first in North America to sign a 15-year, long-term strategic partnership with Philips.

In the U.S. each year, approximately 76% of pediatric patients have identifiable respiratory or cardiac deterioration one hour prior to arrest [1]. The Philips system, which leverages intelligent algorithms and predictive analytics, automates scoring and aids clinicians in identifying patients at risk, leading to timely interventions, optimized rapid response escalations and better patient care and outcomes. While PEWS systems can help determine whether early interventions are necessary, manual data entry for calculations, including subjective measurements, can make it difficult for hospital staff to account for variabilities in a patient's age and development, potentially leading to inaccuracies.

"We have seen an increase in the number of patients with complex medical conditions admitted to Children's but most patient monitoring systems that detect deterioration are built for adults and can't account for pediatric patients, resulting in more data entry demands on our staff," said Renuka Mehta, pediatric intensivist at Children's Hospital of Georgia. "The implementation of this solution has automated the process of identifying at-risk patients with improved accuracy, enabling our staff to address potential issues as early as possible, which makes for a better experience for our staff and potential better outcomes for our patients. This also allows the team to spend more time at the bedside caring for our patients and their families."

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