Abstract:
A system for monitoring one or a plurality of patients is disclosed which comprises: i) a plurality of temperature sensors for attachment to the surface of an absorbent article and generating a signal; ii) a transmitter for communicating the signal to a processor; iii) wherein the processor is provided with computer code which, when executed, determines whether a urination or defecation event has occurred in said garment; and iv) display means for displaying said event to a care-giver.

Description:
REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION 
       [0001]    This application is a continuation-in-part under 35 U.S.C. §120, of U.S. application Ser. No. 12/877,115 filed Sep. 8, 2010 entitled “Multifunctional Wireless Intelligent Monitor”, which is incorporated herein by this reference. 
     
    
     TECHNICAL FIELD 
       [0002]    The invention relates to monitoring systems for monitoring various functions of patients in nursing homes, hospitals or home care. 
       BACKGROUND 
       [0003]    It is important in many situations for medical staff, parents or attendants to be able to monitor the bodily conditions of a patient, infant or elderly person. For example, a nurse will want to know if a patient has stopped breathing or moving, or has fallen down. The cause of that condition could be an accident or an internal condition such as stroke, heart attack, diabetic condition etc. which could be fatal if there is no immediate care. It may also be important to know if there is wetness in the patient&#39;s diaper and whether it has been soiled, whether a patient with wounds has been regularly turned, whether the patient&#39;s body temperature exceeds a certain value and if the environmental temperature is in a normal comfortable range. The position or orientation of the patient or infant in bed, if he or she stands up, or lays down, how much he or she moved in bed or standing up, how many steps were taken and how long they were, what is the oxygen concentration in his or her blood, pulse and blood pressure—these are all factors which may be significant to the health care attendant. The problem of an elderly patient or infant wandering is similarly of high significance. In that case it is important for the care-giver to know where infant or patient is at any moment, when he/she stood up and started walking or running, and through which door the patient passed. If the patient went out of the facility it is important to know his/her global position. 
         [0004]    Existing monitoring systems do not permit a nurse, care-giver or attendant to monitor all of these factors through one interface. Separate diaper wetness monitors which detect wetness, separate temperature monitors or oxygen and pulse monitors or blood pressure monitors are known but not integrated. Existing systems generally do not monitor patient positions nor issue an alarm and record if the patient does not move at all, falls, arouses, if the patient sits or moves, when that happened and how much movement there was. Nor do existing systems monitor how many times a patient or infant urinates or defecates. They do not monitor and record how many steps and what speed or direction a patient took and distance walked, nor detection of the doors a patient went through, or exact location in a building or global positioning. There is therefore also a need for a monitoring system which can detect, monitor and report multiple events and conditions such as the foregoing to a single interface. 
         [0005]    Various systems are known for monitoring the diapers of infants or incontinent patients in health care facilities to detect urination or defecation. U.S. Pat. No. 5,903,222 to Kawarizadeh et al. discloses a detector for detecting wetness conditions in diapers using a capacitive sensor in a housing attached to the exterior surface of the garment being monitored. If a wetness condition is detected a signal is transmitted to a central monitoring station. U.S. Pat. No. 6,570,053 to Roe et al. discloses a diaper which has an electrical sensor to detect signals that correlate to an impending elimination of bodily waste. U.S. Pat. No. 7,977,529 to Bergman et al. discloses an incontinence management system for monitoring wetness events in the diapers of multiple patients. The sensors in such system are located within the diaper so the diapers in such system are designed for use for only a few days as the sensors only last for one incontinent event. The present inventor has also disclosed in United States published patent application Publication no. 2005/0195085 a wireless monitoring system having a number of sensors which attach to a diaper. 
         [0006]    A problem with previous systems is that their useful life is limited to detecting only one urination or defecation event. Since typically such monitors use sensors that are inside the diaper, once the diaper is wet or soiled, for example, subsequent events cannot be detected. There is therefore a need for a monitoring system in which the diaper is useful for more than one incontinence event. There is also a need for a monitoring system which can detect, monitor and report multiple events of urination or defecation without the diaper or other garment having been changed. There is a further need for a system in which the attendant can determine how many incontinence events have occurred in the diaper, the volume of such events, how long since the last event and how frequent the events are. There is a further need for systems for monitoring incontinence which can be used in wound management. 
         [0007]    The foregoing examples of the related art and limitations related thereto are intended to be illustrative and not exclusive. Other limitations of the related art will become apparent to those of skill in the art upon a reading of the specification and a study of the drawings. 
       SUMMARY 
       [0008]    The following embodiments and aspects thereof are described and illustrated in conjunction with systems, tools and methods which are meant to be exemplary and illustrative, not limiting in scope. In various embodiments, one or more of the above-described problems have been reduced or eliminated, while other embodiments are directed to other improvements. 
         [0009]    There is provided a monitoring system which can detect, monitor and report multiple events of urination or defecation without the diaper or other garment having been changed. More particularly the need for a transducer or sensor which must stay inside diaper which, once it becomes wet or soiled cannot detect a second soilness/wetness is avoided. Temperature variations are measured on the diaper surface. Sensor variations are interpreted by an intelligent processor suitably programmed with software to detect and measure more than one urination or defecation event in the same diaper. 
         [0010]    Further an embodiment may also provide an accelerometer and related software working with the same processor to make possible more accurate detection of incontinence events and also possibly patient turn-check as part of wound management, fall, position or orientation and motion. Secondary detectors may measure body temperature, air temperature, oxygen concentration in the blood and blood pressure or other variables or characteristics. The system links sensors, interfaces and care-giver pagers or smartphones by Wi-Fi through a central computer to co-ordinate processing and recordal of data from multiple patients. 
         [0011]    Embodiments therefore provide a system for monitoring multiple patients to an individually determined standard of institutional or home care, for incontinence, wound management, patient location for wandering or falls. The system may include a portable and reusable multi-sensory device, wherein all sensors are on the external surface of the diaper or the patient&#39;s skin and thus are reusable. The device may be attached on each patient with wireless connection to a nurse pager by RF signal or to a server through a Wi-Fi, GPS and GPRS interface. This server may allow monitoring on terminals or caregivers&#39; portable devices such as mobile phone or tablet to receive and record alarms for immediate attention, and other data for future analysis for one or multiple patients. The system increases the quality of care for one patient in home care or multiple patients while allowing the caregiver to reduce costs. 
         [0012]    In addition to the exemplary aspects and embodiments described above, further aspects and embodiments will become apparent by reference to the drawings and by study of the following detailed descriptions. 
     
    
     
       BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS 
         [0013]    Exemplary embodiments are illustrated in referenced figures of the drawings. It is intended that the embodiments and figures disclosed herein are to be considered illustrative rather than restrictive. 
           [0014]      FIG. 1  is a schematic diagram and circuit diagram illustrating a monitoring system according to a first embodiment of the invention; 
           [0015]      FIG. 2  is a cross-sectional view illustrating the multi-sensory device installed on a diaper; 
           [0016]      FIG. 3  illustrates the construction of a temperature sensor according to the invention; 
           [0017]      FIGS. 4 and 5  illustrate two variants of the sensor connections shown in  FIG. 2 ; 
           [0018]      FIG. 6-8  are schematic diagrams illustrating the circuitry of alternative embodiments of the multisensory device; 
           [0019]      FIG. 9  is a schematic diagram illustrating an embodiment of the communication system used in the invention; 
           [0020]      FIG. 10  is a schematic diagram illustrating an embodiment of the patient interface used in the invention; 
           [0021]      FIGS. 11 and 12  are screen shots of a caregiver smartphone used in the invention; 
           [0022]      FIG. 13  is a schematic diagram illustrating the circuitry of the multisensory device and patient interface; 
           [0023]      FIG. 14  is a graph illustrating detection of events by a temperature sensor; 
           [0024]      FIG. 15  is a schematic diagram illustrating the functioning of the invention in a multi-room healthcare facility; 
           [0025]      FIGS. 16-18  are schematic diagrams illustrating further embodiments of the communication system used in the invention; and 
           [0026]      FIGS. 19-32  are screen shots of the monitoring application (MA) which controls the functions of the system, on the Doctor&#39;s and Nurse&#39;s systems respectively. 
       
    
    
     DESCRIPTION 
       [0027]    Throughout the following description specific details are set forth in order to provide a more thorough understanding to persons skilled in the art. However, well known elements may not have been shown or described in detail to avoid unnecessarily obscuring the disclosure. Accordingly, the description and drawings are to be regarded in an illustrative, rather than a restrictive, sense. 
         [0028]    With reference to  FIG. 1 , a first embodiment comprises a system for monitoring patients in nursing homes, hospitals or home care where a patient has a multi-sensory device D 1  which wirelessly communicates with one nurse pager P 1  such as by radio frequency signals. Preferably the devices D 1  have a long RF range of a minimum 100 yards, transmitting for example at 900 MHz. As shown in the schematic circuit diagrams of  FIG. 1 , multi-sensory device D 1  incorporates urination sensors S 1 , S 2 , defecation sensor S 3 , body temperature sensor Sb, air temperature sensor Sa, reflective pulse oximeter O, blood pressure meter and pulse detector Bp, accelerometer ACC, micro controller C, and RF transmitter or transceiver T. Micro controller C may be for example a PIC micro controller from Microchip. Accelerometer ACC may be for example a Freestyle Semiconductor&#39;s micro-machined (MMA) series accelerometer. Accelerometer ACC outputs are wired to microcontroller C analog to digital inputs. A nurse call button B may be provided on D 1 . 
         [0029]    Nurse pager P 1  may have a display SCR such as an LCD color display, cell phone vibrator V, buzzer or beeper Bz, micro controller C, and RF transmitter or transceiver T. Button B on P 1  may be provided to be pressed after an alarm is resolved, which will cancel the alarm on P 1  and the alarm display on SCR. 
         [0030]    With reference to  FIG. 2 , a first embodiment of multisensory device D 1 , designated as  10 , is illustrated attached by adhesive tape to a diaper  24  worn on patient  26 , shown in cross-section. Urination sensors S 1  and S 2 , designated as  28  and  30  and defecation sensor S 3 , shown as  32  are attached to the outer surface of diaper  24 . Body temperature sensor Sb, shown as  36  is attached to the skin of patient  26 . Air temperature sensor Sa shown at  34  is provided on the exterior of device  10 . Oximeter O and pulse and blood pressure sensors Bp can be together in the same sensor body with Sb and connected through the same jack connector to detector body  11  or can be separately connected to detector body  11  through a cable as other sensors. Oximeter O and pulse and blood pressure sensors Bp can be applied directly to the patient body, for example on a finger, stomach or on a leg. 
         [0031]    With reference to  FIG. 3 , urination sensors  28  and  30  and defecation sensor  32  are preferably temperature sensors which may each comprise thermistors  37  of the type used in electronic medical thermometers, stainless steel covered, which are each fixed in and extend from a plastic disc as shown in  FIG. 3 . Urination sensors  28  and  30  and defecation sensor  32  may for example be secured to the diaper  24  exterior surface by a removable adhesive surface attached to the sensor. Preferably two sensors are used for sensing a urine event and one for defecation. For infants a single urine sensor may be sufficient. As illustrated, one urine sensor  28  is on the detector body  11  which is a plastic shell in tight contact with the diaper  24  and the second sensor  30  is on the cable  13  as described. For better sensitivity there can be more than two sensors for urine and more than one sensor for defecation events, all located at appropriate locations on the surface of diaper  24 . Sensors  37  have a stainless steel cover and are soldered/assembled on a thin elastic printed circuit board (PCB) film. This film is covered with an elastic insulator. Only the tip of sensors extend from this elastic plastic cover so they can be in tight contact with diaper  24  to ensure a sensitive measurement. Numerous sensors on all surfaces are not required since the wetness spreads in the absorbent material in the diaper, to which the diaper exterior surface is tightly connected, so temperature change is conducted over a large surface area. 
         [0032]    As shown in  FIG. 4 , both urine sensor  30  and defecation sensor  32  may be connected to the device through a single cable  13  and jack  31 . Jack  33  and cable  15  as shown in  FIG. 5  connect a single sensor and can be used to connect body temperature sensor  36  when connected to the upper side of detector body  11  or the defecation sensor  32 , when it is connected to lower side of detector body  11 . Either jack  33  with one sensor or jack  31  with two sensors can be connected to the lower female connector depending on the size of the patient, smaller for jack  33  and bigger for jack  31 , and the software on microcontroller C distinguishes which sensors are connected to each female connector. Jacks  31  and  33  can be of the audio plug type and cables  13 ,  15  are preferably flexible cables less than 1.5 mm in diameter. 
         [0033]    Device  10  measures outputs from the accelerometer ACC and all other sensors, preferably very frequently, for example, at least 10 times per second. Accelerometer ACC measures co-ordinate acceleration and also orientation and can measure position by reference to a fixed position, whether pre-defined or taken from a GPS, through measurement of the change in co-ordinate motion. The ACC integrated circuit is positioned on device  10 &#39;s printed circuit board (PCB) in such way that its sides, the PCB sides and detector body  11  plastic shell&#39;s sides are aligned. ACC position or orientation is the same as patient position or orientation and thus patient position or orientation is determined by measuring and interpreting the ACC three axis outputs. This also applies when the ACC measures acceleration. Acceleration and position or orientation is given by those three axes&#39; amplitude. Adding those three outputs provides patient motion intensity. By interpreting each of the three outputs&#39; amplitudes/values, the patient walking/running direction, steps cadence and speed can be calculated. Such measuring at high frequency, such as at least 10 times per second, is necessary to determine when the patient leaves his/her bed or when the patient urinates or defecates. 
       Incontinence Detection 
       [0034]    For incontinence detection and measurement, generally urine or feces are a few degrees warmer than the temperature measured on the diaper  24  exterior surface. Sensors  28 ,  30 ,  32  (S 1 , S 2  and S 3 ) measure temperature on the diaper surface. When urination or a bowel movement occurs there is an increase of temperature of 0.5 to 2 degrees Celsius at the diaper surface  24 . Urination or feces liquids are immediately absorbed in the diaper and that leads to an increase of diaper surface temperature. This sudden increase is interpreted by microcontroller C D 1  as a urination or bowel movement. Microcontroller C may measure the variations of temperature continually or only if there is a minimum variation within a certain period. The difference between urination and defecation is detected by the position of the temperature sensor where the temperature increase occurred. For example if in a certain period of time there is measured at one of the sensors  28 ,  30  or  32  a temperature rise of a certain minimal value such as 0.2 degrees, this rise is interpreted by controller C as a urination or defecation detection, depending on which sensor was detected. The specific temperature rise will depend on the specific type of diaper, whether paper or cloth, size and thickness of the absorbent material, diaper starting temperature, and urine or defecation quantity and rate of flow. While infant diapers do not differ significantly in thickness of the absorbent material from adult diapers the surface area of adult diapers is considerably greater but for both types of diaper the wetness travels quickly to the diaper surface for detection by the sensors  37 . The temperature rise will also depend on the frequency of incontinence events. A greater frequency of events will mean less time between each event and less temperature rise at each event, but no matter how high the frequency is there will always be a minimal rise, for example of at least 0.2 degrees detected within a certain time period. The increase in temperature at the diaper outer surface can also be influenced by the patient&#39;s position or orientation in bed. For example if and when a patient turns face down, the multi-sensory device  10  comes between the patient and the bed which further insulates the diaper and temperature measured at the diaper surface can increase a few tenths of a degree. In this case the microcontroller C will take the position or orientation measured by the accelerometer ACC into the calculation in determining whether an incontinence event has occurred. The temperature at the diaper surface can also be affected by the patient uncovering herself and by a change in the ambient air temperature, which the microcontroller C will take into account from measurements at Sa,  34 . 
         [0035]    When an incontinence event occurs the temperature at the diaper surface varies with time. The graph of temperature as a function of time ( FIG. 14 ) is interpreted by microcontroller C. The rate of temperature rise depends on velocity and volume of flow of the urine or feces and temperature of the urine or feces. With some corrections from empirical data, microcontroller C can calculate with approximation the maximum flow during the urination or defecation and the total quantity of urination or defecation. With reference to  FIG. 14 , the size of the area under the graph is a function of the volume of waste material or liquid which is calibrated empirically. Any small sudden increase of temperature within seconds at the diaper surface signifies that a urination or defecation has occurred no matter how small the quantity is. Microcontroller C takes into account the starting temperature, rate of increase, time to the maximum temperature, and total temperature rise, as well as the patient position or orientation and temperature at sensor Sa,  34 , to estimate volume and rate of flow of each event. Microcontroller C calculates and records the measurements and determines when an alarm condition is fulfilled. When the maximum number of urinations or defecations is reached, an alarm can be signaled and sent to pager P 1 , or whether these detections occurred too often or they were too rare. These may be symptoms of patient problems such as diarrhea, constipation, cystitis, prostate problems, etc. When a urination or bowel movement occurs the pager P 1  receives the detection signal and displays that there is a urination or a bowel movement. The pager also counts how many times these events occurred. 
         [0036]    One of the advantages of this method is that the system can detect more than one urination or defecation in the same diaper with reusable sensors, which work outside on the diaper surface. That is of benefit for the patient as well as for nurse and health care facility by savings on diapers and nurse time. 
         [0037]    A Multi-Sensory OFF alarm is given when the multisensory device  10  falls off of the patient diaper or skin. This detection is done with heat sensor S 1  ( 28 ) located on detector body  11  and in direct contact with diaper  24 . When Multisensory device  10  is off of the diaper, controller C measures a decrease in temperature at this sensor  28  and gives the alarm. Sensor S 2  ( 30 ) OFF and/or sensor S 3  ( 32 ) OFF alarm is achieved in the same way. When C measures a decrease in temperature at one or both of these sensors this alarm is given. In a situation where only one sensor  32  is connected to multisensory device  10 , an alarm is given correspondingly. These alarms may be given by sound and visually whether on computer and nurse pager P 1  and are recorded in the computer. When at least one of the above alarms are given, multisensory device  10  may not transmit any data until the nurse reattaches the parts and pushes the reset button. 
         [0038]    Another embodiment of multisensory device  10 , shown as D 1 . a  in  FIG. 6  contains all or some of the sensors as shown in the embodiment in  FIG. 1  plus an extra GPS (Global Positioning System) module  40  and a GPRS (General Packet Radio Service) module  42  in the same device. Device D 1 . a  communicates with pager P 1  as shown in  FIG. 1  by 900 MHz radio-frequency signal. When the patient associated with device D 1 . a  exceeds a prescribed distance from the facility or comes out of RF range, microcontroller C turns off transmitter or transceiver T and turns on the GPS module  40  and GPRS module  42  and transmits periodically messages containing patient coordinates to a nurse/caregiver pager P 1  or smart phone (see smartphone  118  as described in  FIG. 11  below). A specially designed application in the nurse&#39;s pager Pi or smart phone allows the nurse to see the patient&#39;s position on a map. A multisensory device  10  having the features of D 1 . a  can be used in the other two embodiments D 2 . a  and D 3 . a  described below. 
         [0039]      FIG. 7  illustrates another embodiment of multisensory device  10  designated D 1 . b  similar to D 1 . a  but without a transmitter or transceiver T. Alarms and data are transmitted by GPRS as coded SMS messages to a nurse/caregiver pager P 1  or smart phone. A custom application in the smart phone decodes alarms and data and displays it by sound and on screen. All data is recorded in smart phone memory to be downloaded later. In a healthcare institution or even in home care, a smart phone may send all data received to a server by Wi-Fi. Alarms can be received at any distance between patient and nurse. A nurse smart phone can receive alarms and data from more than one patient each having a device  10  as in D 1 . b.  When the caregiver/attendant activates from his/her smart phone the GPS module in D 1 . b,  patient position can be detected with nurse smart phone as in D 1 . a.    
         [0040]      FIG. 8  illustrates another embodiment of multi-sensory device  10  designated D 1 . c  and contains all or some sensors as in the embodiment shown in  FIG. 1  plus a module  44 . It transmits alarms and data through the facility&#39;s Wi-Fi to a server and nurse pager P 1 . D 1 . c  can communicate data with the patient&#39;s smart phone or issued pager (not shown), which transmits data further to a server. Device D 1 . c  sleeps when there is no alarm to be transmitted and wakes up just to transmit the alarm. In a homecare version D 1 . c  communicates directly with a smart phone which displays and records data in it. It can be any smart phone having installed the required application. The advantage is that the attendant&#39;s own smart phone can be used for this purpose. Alarms can be received anywhere a Wi-Fi service is available in the facility. D 1 . c  can also be used in the embodiments shown In  FIGS. 1 ,  6  and  7 . 
         [0041]    Fall and Wandering Alarms and Pressure Ulcer/Wound Management Detection (Turn-Check) 
         [0042]    Fall and Wandering prevention and alarms are possible due to the accelerometer ACC inside multisensory device  10 . ACC through C detects patient position or orientation at any time. C measures at its analog to digital inputs all three ACC outputs and by them calculates patient position or orientation. Device  10  is affixed upside up on the patient&#39;s front, on the diaper as in  FIG. 2  or on the patient&#39;s body front, with adhesive tape. The position of the accelerometer ACC and its three outputs depends on device  10 &#39;s position. Being affixed on the diaper  24 , the accelerometer ACC output thus depends on the diaper wearer position or orientation. Microcontroller C in device  10  measures ACC outputs and calculates patient position or orientation by its software. All position or orientations such as Stand Up, Lay Down, Left Side, Right Side, Face Down, Face Lip are transmitted to nurse pager P 1  or server and monitoring application MA through interface  12 ,  14  and Wi-Fi as described below in the second and third embodiments. MA analyzes these position or orientations and their timing and sends alarms and data by Wi-Fi to pager P 1 . 
         [0043]    OFF SEAT alarm is used in situations where it is important to get an alarm when a patient just rises from a seated position. In that case device  10  is affixed on the patient&#39;s thigh front so that device  10  is upside up when the patient is standing. The alarm may be off when patient half rises and an alarm, which may include a local beeper or vibrator included in Detector  10  to alert when the patient rises out of a chair. To record patient motion, ACC outputs for patient movement and acceleration are measured by C in multisensory device  10 . In this way patient movement and steps can be detected. Knowing the timing between steps, number of steps and the acceleration of each step, C can calculate the speed, distance walked or run by the patient, motion intensity and total motion in a certain time, like a nurse&#39;s shift or a day. A patient agitation alarm may be given when a prescribed motion acceleration value stored in the MA table is reached or exceeded. Values of motion as a result of ACC output values are determined based on empirical data. In order to determine patient motion intensity per unit of time, C receives accumulated measurements from all three outputs of the ACC over a short period of time, on the order of a few seconds. 
         [0044]    A Patient Fall is detected when the patient changes his/her position from Stand Up to Lay Down in less than a certain time and a certain minimum motion has been detected. The parameters for analyzing this data is determined empirically. An Up and Go alarm is detected when patient changes position from Lay Down to Stand Up in less than certain time and immediately thereafter walks a few steps. Walking is calculated from motion intensity and variation of acceleration on a certain axis which shows when the patient made each step. If this alarm is associated with distance between D 2  and I 2  (defined below) it shows with certainty when patient left his/her bed. The ACC can identify patient lying face up, face down, left or right side, and stand up, and alerts the nurse when patient is agitated, and moves too quickly. It further alerts nurse when patient has left bed and taken steps. The MA can program patient&#39;s maximum range of travel, in association with the GPS can locate the patient inside or outside the facility radius, and the nurse sees patient location on her pager screen. 
         [0045]    UP alarm is given when patient position or orientation has changed from Lay Down to Stand up in less than a certain time limit. Position alarm is given when patient is in one of the selected positions listed in  FIG. 19 . The Wound Management or Turn-Check alarm uses the same ACC whose outputs are analyzed by C and transmits patient position or orientation to MA through I 2  or I 3 , Wi-Fi and server S 2  or S 3 . In this case only position or orientations in bed are needed, such as Left Side, Right Side, Face Down and Face Up. MA analyzes the time patient was in one of these position or orientations and if the patient did not turn to another position or orientation within a prescribed time tries first to wake the patient by waking sounds by MP3 module. If the patient does not wake up, for example, after 15 minutes an alarm is sent to nurse pager P 2  or P 3  such as through a server and the MA. A minimum time and a maximum time can be set in the MA table (see  FIG. 19 ). Both are as set, for example by a doctor. The minimum time, also called Oxygenation time, is the minimum for a certain position or orientation to be considered as enough for oxygenation of a wound. If patient stays less than this time in a position or orientation, the system does not consider that the time was enough for re-oxygenation of body wound. Usually this time is around 15 minutes. If the patient stays in one position or orientation longer than the maximum time prescribed and entered in the MA table, at first wake-up sounds are played to the patient, then the alarm of Turn-Check is sent to nurse pager P 2  or P 3 . 
         [0046]    Thus the three axis accelerometer ACC sends its data on three lines to its amplifier and its microcontroller C. Each line corresponds to variation in accelerations on one of the three axes. The position of the accelerometer ACC is given by the Detector D 1 &#39;s printed circuit board contained inside of the Detector D 1 . Slight breathing motion may also be detected with the accelerometer ACC. Different position or orientations of diaper wearer are detected with accelerometer ACC. If no motion has been detected a no motion alarm is sent to pager P 1 , P 2  or P 3 . The table in the MA in  FIG. 19  can be set to send an alarm when the patient comes out from a coma or from a very long period of no motion. All data from accelerometer ACC are transmitted, received and displayed in real time. 
         [0047]    Breath detection is obtained with the same accelerometer ACC by adding an amplifier to the 3 outputs of the accelerometer and programming it accordingly in Controller C. Controller C measures and calculates all outputs from accelerometer ACC. Breath count and its frequency is done by measuring and interpreting ACC outputs oscillations in time, their maximums and minimums and counting them. If in a certain time period these outputs are under a certain value determined by preliminary tests, absence of breath or motion has been detected and an alarm is sent to pager P 1 . If a patient stops moving and breathing an alarm is signaled and a Nurse can intervene. This detection may saves lives in newborns&#39; Sudden Death Syndrome (SID) and patients of all ages whom breathing have stopped or their motion decreases almost to zero. Also it is useful for patients coming out from coma and start moving. In this case monitoring table MA is setup to alarm when patient starts moving. 
         [0048]    Patient wandering and location detection in an institution is detected as follows.  FIG. 15  is a schematic of a section of an institution in which each patient  100  has his/her own multisensory device  10 /D 1  on his/her body on a diaper or secured to the patients&#39;s body with adhesive tape. Patient position in a room  102  can be in bed or out of bed. In each room  102  a patient interface  14  is provided. Such interfaces are at fixed locations with power supplied through wall outlets. In the hallway  104  is a patient  100  who may be walking. All interfaces in the vicinity receive the transmission from the detector D the patient. Each reception has a certain amplitude, which depends on the distance to D. Interface  14  measures this amplitude and sends it to server S 2  together with D&#39;s and I&#39;s identification code. Server S 2  considers the greatest amplitude which corresponds to the closest interface  15 . The identification code of the closest interface  15  is displayed on the server monitoring application and on the nurse&#39;s pager for each detector. In this way the location of each patient is always known. Patient location detection is handled the same in the second and third embodiments. 
         [0049]    In order to improve patient location detection accuracy, a multitude of door detectors DD as in  FIG. 9  can be installed on doors. Door detectors associated with described location detection method can give a better idea about patient location, the door he/she is at and the direction patient has passed door. Such door detectors can be installed at all doors or only at main doors such as entrance or back doors which go outside. These repeaters Rn are wall plugged for power with voltage adapters and are on all the time. A door Detector DD comprises one repeater R connected to an optical motion sensor OMS installed on top of each side of the door. Optical sensors are oriented in such a way to detect patient only when is very close to the door. When patient approaches the door on one side, optical motion sensor detects patient and wakes R up. Repeater R “interrogates” patient Device  10  and finds out its identity. If there is more than one D close to the door R considers only the one with stronger reception and closest. Then when the patient passes the door, motion sensor on the other side of door detects the patient, wakes the repeaters Rn up and interrogates the D finding out its identity. If the identity is the same as Detector&#39;s identified before, the RF signal is most powerful and this signal decreases as the patient moves away from the door, R sends data to PC about which patient passed that door and what was his/her passing direction. In this way door detector DD detects through which door patient passed and what direction patient had. If that door detection is activated in MA, the server sends an alarm to pager P 2  or P 3 . DD functions are patient sensing and identifying, location detection and direction of passing. Video camera VCn is located over the patient bed or in any other places of interest. It is wired to a repeater R which is an interface I 2  or I 3  without MP3 module. Repeater transmits video or still images to server  52 . VCn are wall plugged for power with voltage adapters and are on all the time. Images are seen on the computer PC and nurse pager or tablet. 
         [0050]    Transmission frequency varies as function of patient position, mobility and location. When a patient is in bed, transmission frequency is low, perhaps once in 10-15 minutes in order to not expose patient too much to Rh radiation. Meanwhile any alarm can go off if necessary. Or, when patient has left the bed, transmission frequency increases for more accurate location of the patient. Nurse Call is produced when button B is pressed on device  10  and if this alarm is checked in the monitoring application MA table  200  in server S 2  or S 3 . Nurse Reminder is an alarm to remind nurse when she has to do something. It produces an alarm if alarm is checked in MA table  200 . The reminder allows the nurse to enter the specified time of reminder and what the nurse has to be reminded about. 
         [0051]    A Distance alarm is given when a certain value in MA table  200  or location is reached and only if this alarm is checked in the table. Values are chosen conventionally and are approximately proportional to the distance between device  10  and interface I 2  or I 3 . They are obtained by measuring the amplitude of signal received by transmitter, transceiver T in I 2  or I 3 . The location is determined as the closest interface. 
         [0052]    Too Hot and Too Cold alarms are generated as a function of the values written in MA table  200  at Air Temp cold and hot temperature limits. If the measured temperature by sensor  34  (Sa) is equal to or less than the limit prescribed at Cold column in the table  200 , a Too Cold Alarm is generated. If the measured temperature is equal to or higher than the value recorded at Hot column in MA table  200  a Too Hot alarm is generated at pager P 1  or  118  (P 2  or P 3 ). Ambient air temperature is always displayed at pager P 1  or  118  (P 2 ). A Fever alarm is generated if temperature measured at Sb is equal or bigger than value recorded in table under Body Temp (see  FIG. 19 ). Thus Sensor  34  sends to microcontroller C data about temperature at the detector  10  exterior surface. If the diaper wearer is uncovered or it is too cold or too hot, the pager  118  alarms the attendant. Alarms are also given if measured pulse, oxygen concentration in blood and blood pressure are out of setup limits. Air temperature and body temperature are measured at all times for all patient locations to protect the patient&#39;s life. 
         [0053]    Data transmission from D 1  device  10 , occurs at equal intervals of time and is organized in bits of data which are transmitted sequentially as binary strings. In this binary string each bit relates to a certain detection and the order of it is strictly the same in each transmission. Such binary string contains in sequential order: a code of identification of device  10  followed by 0 or 1 if device  10  works in normal mode with occasional (10 minutes) sync transmissions or in search mode (once or twice per second), urination detection (0 or 1), defecation detection (0 or 1), urination event quantity in a certain # of bits, defecation event quantity, urine maximum flow, 6 bits showing six position or orientations of up, right side, left side, face up, face down, lay down, nurse call (0 or 1), a certain number of bits expressing body temperature, a certain number of bits expressing the air temperature, a certain number of bits expressing motion intensity, low battery alarm, alarm off chair, Stand Up alarm, Fall alarm, Agitation alarm, UP &amp; Go alarm, Lay Down alarm, oxygen concentration, blood pressure and pulse. The distance between device  10  and pager P 1  or interfaces I 2 , I 3  as described below is calculated in the pager or interface as a function of reception strength. 
         [0054]    A second embodiment illustrated in  FIG. 9  has one or a multitude n of multi-sensory devices D 2 . n  each having the features of device  10  as described above. There are one or a multitude of interfaces I 2 . n.  Server S 2  may be one or a multitude of local computers and individual computers PC communicate over the internet by Wi-Fi with interfaces I 2 . n  and pagers P 2 . n.  One or a multitude of Nurse Pagers (shown as P 2 . n ) is also provided. Devices  10  shown as D 2 . 1 , D 2 . 2  etc. have the same construction and functions as device  10  in the previous embodiment. Incontinence, Fall and wandering alarms and Wound management detection and/or measure can be provided in all the described embodiments. 
         [0055]    With reference to  FIG. 10 , interface I 2 , shown as  12 ,  14 , is located always next to patient bed. It comprises a receiver or a transceiver T and microcontroller C. CV module is a converter. It converts signals from microcontroller C into Wi-Fi and sends them to server S 2 . MP3 is an MP3 module controllable by microcontroller C. SP is a speaker. B is a button on I 2 . A nurse presses this button after she resolves an alarm. The monitoring application (MA) understands that the alarm has been resolved and stops flashing red the alarm on computer PC screen and on pager P 2 . 
         [0056]    In this further embodiment interface  12 ,  14  (I 2 ) may contain an extra phone module GPRS which sends data to pagers P 2  which are smart phones or to computers PC. In this variant, as in D 1 . a  and D 1 . b  a GPRS module receives data from D and serves as safety backup in case Wi-Fi does not work. In a further embodiment of I 2  the module GPRS may replace the Wi-Fi module. In this situation in which there is only GPRS module and no Wi-Fi module the system can be used in places where is no Wi-Fi. 
         [0057]    In the first embodiment, transmissions from D 1  to P 1  are synchronized with crystals of high accuracy. These crystals are electronic components used to sync two devices. In this way P 1  turns its reception on exactly when a transmission from d 1  is expected. This is necessary to save battery life in P 1  and because frequency of transmission varies as a function of patient position and motion. Transmissions are rare when a patient is in bed or in a room and are more frequent when the patient stands up and/or is moving. This is detected when Stand Up, Up &amp; Go and distance alarms are triggered. Resynchronization is necessary for the first embodiment shown in  FIG. 1  and is done when device  10  and pager P 1  are restarting or when synchronization is lost due to RF range overpass. In case transmitter T in device  10  and pager P 1  is a transceiver both devices  10  and pager Pi know their transmissions have not been received because device  10  does not receive back reception confirmation. In case T is a transmitter, pager P 1  knows when transmission is lost if they do not receive a transmission within a certain time. Making sure the alarm of Sync is off, Resync is done as follows: device  10  continues its transmissions. Pager P 1  turns on its receiver for a time which is longer than the sync interval and synchronizes its reception at the moment of receiving two consecutive transmissions from device  10 . The interval between two synchronization transmissions can be for example between 1 second and 10 minutes. Alarm transmissions are done immediately when they are detected. Pager P 1  reception is on each second and it turns on for a period of time 5% longer than the time of a whole transmission, to cover time error from device  10 . For purposes of a perfect synchronization, each time pager P 1  receives it readjusts its reception timing after the last reception. If device  10  and pager P 1  both have transceivers instead of Transmitter and Receiver it is advantageous for an easier synchronization and safer data reception, but power consumption at device  10  and pager P 1  is increased. The advantage with using a transceiver is that pager or interface transceiver respond to device  10  transceiver to repeat transmission if data reception is not accurately received. This is important especially for alarms transmission accuracy and for patient identification. In case of a transmitter at device  10  and a receiver at pager P 1  each alarm is transmitted three times in order to be sure it was received and identification is done correctly. In the second and third embodiments, interfaces I 2  and I 3  do not need synchronization with device  10  because they are on continuously, being supplied with power from a wall plug. 
         [0058]    Microcontroller C in pager P 1  or interface  12 ,  14  receives data from device  10  through receiver or transceiver T and compares number of bits and binary string structure to the model it has in its memory. If they do not correspond that transmission is not considered as good and it is not considered at all. If they correspond microcontroller C further reads the identification code from its memory. If it finds it to be correct, microcontroller C considers the transmission as good and reads the detections in the data string. If the ID code is not the one pager P 1  has it in its memory the reception is canceled. In the case of homecare where usually there is only one device  10  and pager P 1  this does not occur. If there are multiple patient devices then this identification is useful. 
         [0059]    Minimizing power consumption of device  10  is necessary. All companies making RF components try to minimize their products&#39; power consumption. This is important for device  10  and its battery to be as small as possible and to last as long as possible. This can be achieved by optimizing the frequency, power and duration of transmissions. In a case where the patient is in bed, as detected by his/her Lay Down position and by the small distance between the device  10  and P 1 , device  10  transmissions are made only when an alarm is detected or when patient location detection is needed. In case of device  10 , in addition to alarms or data transmissions there are also transmissions for synchronization. Synchronization transmissions are rare (e.g. every 10 minutes). When a patient has left the bed, communication turns from normal mode to search mode and as a result transmission interval is much decreased. While the patient is in bed in position Lay Down or no motion is received from ACC, or the patient is close to pager P 1  or to the patient interface, transmission power is reduced/optimized on the closest pager/interface reception and the interval between transmissions is reduced dramatically. While in search mode transmission frequency is decided inside D 1  depending on the patient motion. Greater motion leads to greater frequency. Optimizing power of transmissions is another way of saving power in D&#39;s battery. This is only possible with T as a transceiver in device  10  and pager P 1  and it works as follows: when a signal received by the pager/interface is greater than a certain minimum amplitude prescribed in its software, the transceiver in the pager/interface ‘tells’ the transceiver T in device  10  to reduce correspondingly its transmission power. With these optimizations in transmission frequency and power it becomes possible that D can work with a coin battery such as CR2032 for a long period of time. In the case of device  10 , a GPS and GPRS module&#39;s power consumption is significantly higher and they can be used only a short time and only in case of emergency. In case of the embodiments in  FIGS. 6 and 7 , the GPS, Wi-Fi and GPRS modules need a bigger battery. 
         [0060]    Being worn on patient body, device  10  needs to be as small as possible. The patient can be an infant, a pet or a senior. This device size minimization is done by choosing a non-rechargeable small lithium battery which lasts a minimum one week or a built in lithium rechargeable battery. Optimization of battery consumption applies in the same way as above for the second and third embodiments. 
         [0061]    Regarding pager P 1  features, pager/smartphone P 1  may contain any or all of the main features: incontinence, Fall and wandering, Turn-Check, Oxygen concentration detection, Blood pressure and Pulse meter. When an alarm comes up it is displayed on pager P 1  screen and/or by sound or vibration. Prescribed values or settings of all alarm limits are recorded in pager P 1  menu in a similar but simpler manner as they are recorded in the embodiments 2 and 3 described below which have a monitoring application MA table (see  FIG. 19 ) in the system computer. PI may contain all features but only the feature that has been paid for is activated. If a customer wants more features activated he/she goes to company website, pays for more features and receives a software update which if installed in Pager PI activates the features he/she paid for. This same feature applies for embodiments 2 and 3. In embodiments 2 and 3 activation of new features in the system after payment was received is done automatically over the connection to the internet. The fact that multiple functions can be provided with limited hardware and software thus creates the possibility of making the same products with more or less activated functions. These individual functions can be separately activated for a certain period of time and activated or deactivated even online, using the same hardware. 
         [0062]    With reference to  FIGS. 11 and 12 , Nurse Pager P 2 , P 3  may be an Android, or other operating system, smart phone  118  connected to Wi-Fi working with a custom smart phone application which converts it into a Nurse pager. Nurse receives alarms and data about her patients from server S 2  or S 3  and displays them on its screen  120  As a first step, smart phone  118  is configured as shown in the screenshot  120  in  FIG. 11 . When the Nurse logs in at screen  122 , a list of patients  124  is displayed ( FIG. 12 ). When pager  118  rings an alarm and the Nurse turns on her smart phone Pager  118 , the patient with the alarm  126  flashes red. If the Nurse touches the alarm all data of that patient appears on screen  128 . After the alarm is viewed and resolved by pressing Interface  12 ,  14  button B, the patient color returns to yellow. All data  130  about any patient is seen in real time on the screen by touching patient name. 
         [0063]    The communication between D 2  and T in I 2  ( FIG. 10 ) is identical to the first embodiment. Once the string of bits is received and checked it is memorized in an intermediary buffer to ensure no alarm is missed. This happens independently of Wi-Fi communication. Wi-Fi transmissions take place at equal times, once every 1 to 6 seconds for example. The moment Wi-Fi transmission comes up, data is taken from that buffer and transmitted through CV. If S 2  confirms alarm reception then the buffer is reset. After an alarm is resolved, a nurse presses the button B″ on I 2  and I 2  sends a package of data to server S 2 , so server S 2  deactivates that alarm and displays in MA and in P 2  that the alarm was resolved. Alarm is displayed in different colors in MA and in P 2  on its different stages. The first stage and color is when an alarm was first received in server S 2  from I 2  and sent to P 2 . The second stage and next color is when an alarm is acknowledged by a nurse by touching the flashing patient name on her pager  118  (P 2 ) screen. After that alarm is displayed on P 2  the just received alarm refers to that patient. A flashing color occurs when a certain time passes without the alarm being resolved. The final color comes after the nurse resolves the alarm and presses the I 2  button B. Then the alarm disappears from P 2 &#39;s screen. P 3  is the same as P 2 . 
         [0064]    The multisensory device  10  with the sensors described above, and central computer S 2  suitably programmed, allows the caregivers and administrators to control the various functions of the system using the monitoring application (MA) shown in  FIG. 19-32 . In the first embodiment C does all calculations m Detector D 1 . In embodiments 2 and 3 the detector transmits temperature measurements from sensors to computer S 2 . In monitoring application table  200  the temperature rise limit and time, in which it occurs, are settable. Also all volumes and flows are calculated and recorded. Server S 2  or S 3  receives data from all interfaces and, by its monitoring application (MA—see  FIG. 19 ), compares data with its settings. If data values received from the interfaces are equal to settings values prescribed in that table it sends alarms to nurse pagers  18 . Server S 2  may be only one computer with server software and monitoring application (MA) installed on it or it can be one computer working as server and a multitude of secondary computers PC, one in each facility section. Each computer PC has its own monitoring application MA installed. The system for one patient containing one D 2 , one I 2  and a nurse pager P 2  and a computer is preferred for homecare and has the advantage of recording all data about the patient with the possibility of medical staff to access these records online. Settings are prescribed by an operator in the monitoring application MA as the doctor recommends for each patient. These settings are written in a table on the computer screen. In this table  200  are, for example, incontinence features, Fall and Wandering features and Wound Management features. 
         [0065]    The combination in the described system of incontinence detection by heat sensors together with position or orientation and motion, fall and wandering detection by accelerometer has a number of advantages. A large proportion of patients in hospital or nursing homes are both incontinent and bedridden. Incontinence detection and alarm is necessary to be associated with patients with wounds in Wound Management Turn Check because any wetness will aggravate the wound. Therefore combining position or orientation detection with wetness detection provides a more effective wound management. Detection of motion intensity in bed, agitation plus breath motions may assist in predicting an incontinence event and an incontinent patient infant or senior may be in greater danger of failing since the incontinent patient may try to reach a toilet. Preventing falls by an UP alarm followed by UP and Go alarm is therefore improved by also monitoring incontinent events. The association of incontinence detection and position or orientation/motion also assists in saving power at Detector  10 . Transmission frequency depends on position and motion. When patient is in bed, transmissions for patient location are very rare. When patient position or orientation changes to stand up and the patient starts moving, transmission frequency for patient location increases with motion. As noted above, the orientation of the individual (lying down versus upright, on front, side or back position or orientation in bed) can influence temperature rise and the accuracy of the wetness detection, volume and flow detection at the incontinence sensor as can the ambient temperature. C can keep track of these variables and will adjust correspondingly. This combination of detections and measurements at all three sensors S 1 , S 2 , S 3 , Air temperature sensor Sa and ACC can therefore allow for corrections for a greater sensitivity and precision. 
         [0066]    The features of the MA are illustrated in  FIG. 19-32 . Each assistant accesses a “Patient Options” page, from the assistant&#39;s home page, for each patient the assistant is responsible for, as shown in  FIG. 19 , in which the assistant can set the parameters for each variable which will trigger an alarm. The assistant maintains a list of his/her patients as in  FIG. 20 , with a record of each patient&#39;s location and monitor identification. Monitors can be added ( FIG. 23 ). The level of difficulty which is assigned for that patient for the assistant to respond to each type of alarm event which the assistant mat need to deal with for that patient can be viewed or set as in  FIG. 21 . Doctors and assistants with access to the system are added, removed or viewed from the Administrator&#39;s home page ( FIG. 24 ,  25 ) as can monitors  9 FDog.  23 . The Administrator is provided a report on all alarms generated by patients ( FIG. 22 ). These can be viewed by time period and patient and by assistant. The Administrator can view an Alarm Delays Report ( FIG. 31 ) showing the delay which occurred from the time of the alarm to the time of response by the assistant, selected by assistant, patient or time period.  FIG. 26  illustrates a work repartition report which provides to the Administrator by assistant and time period the amount of work required for that assistant to respond to patient alarms. Alarm frequency reports are provided as a graph, selected by patient ( FIG. 27 ), alarm type per patient ( FIG. 28 ), by assistant ( FIG. 31 ) and time of day ( FIG. 29 ) and showing the sum of the level of difficulty of the alarms instead of numeric ( FIG. 32 ). 
         [0067]    With reference to  FIG. 16-18  a third embodiment 3 contains i) a multitude of units Un; ii) a multitude of access points AP connected to a multitude of PC&#39;s USB, connected to Wi-Fi; and iii) a server S 3  similar to S 2  and connected to Wi-Fi. A unit U contains: I) multitude of multi-sensory devices D 3 . n  attached to the patient front on diaper or body, ii) a multitude of Interfaces I 3 . n  located next to patient bed wall plugged in power; iii) an access point AP connected to a computer USB; iv) a computer PC connected to Wi-Fi; v) a multitude of Nurse Pagers P 3  identical to P 2 . The circuits of D 3  and I 3  are shown in  FIG. 13 . D 3 &#39;s controller CT communicates with I 3 &#39;s controller CT by RF communication. Controller CT includes a microcontroller and a transceiver in the same housing. 
         [0068]    D 3  communicates with I 3  by Zigbee protocol compliant to regulation IEEE 802.15.4. As illustrated in  FIG. 17 , data circulates from D 3  and I 3  to the next I 3  and R until it arrives to AP. AP is connected to PC USB. A unit U communicates to a central server S 3  through PC and Wi-Fi. PC works as a local server and has installed a Monitoring application MA as in the second embodiment. PC communicates to Wi-Fi and from there to pagers  118  (P 3   n ) and institution server S 3  or other computers. A unit may serve a healthcare facility section comprising multiple e.g. 1 to 20 pairs of devices  10  (D 3 ) and interfaces I 3  and one to 10 pagers  118  (P 3 ). If a patient comes out of the reception range of interfaces I 3  repeaters R are necessary. An R is an interface I 3  without MP3 capability, SP and button B. Repeater R reports D 3 &#39;s location to the closest I 3  or D 3 . If a patient&#39;s device  10  (D 3 ) goes beyond the last I 3 , and I 3  receives a weaker RF signal from D 3 , I 3  orders D 3  to increase its transmission strength. If reception is lost the last I 3  or R generates an alarm. Always D 3  transmission strength is optimized in order to save battery power, as currently applied for in cell phones. While D 3  stays close to an I 3  transmission strength is optimized as small as possible. By Zigbee protocol a patient location is thus always known by the closest Interface I 3  or Repeater R. Therefore in this embodiment communication is assured no matter how many patients are in facility. Patient location is given by the closest I 3  and it is displayed on MA and on P 3 . 
         [0069]    The advantages of the second and third embodiments in  FIG. 9  and  FIG. 16-18  over the first embodiment are that one nurse takes care of more than 1 patient. Communication range is everywhere in a facility using its Wi-Fi. A Nurse sees continuously on her pager  118  all data about her patients. MA entries make possible the following. A dispatcher can supervise on computer S 2  or S 3  all alarms resolving. All data front devices  10  is processed safer and faster. Server S 3  records and process all data. A manager can see and optimize each nurse&#39;s activities, which nurse work is harder or easier, which patient is easier or harder to care of. A Doctor can see each patient data and conclude about their health problems. 
         [0070]    According to another variation of Embodiment 3 shown in  FIG. 16 , interfaces I 3  can be dispensed with. In this case Turn-Check function does not have the ability (MP3 module) to wake up the patient. D 3  can incorporate a vibrator or sound maker which can fulfill this function of waking up the patient. 
         [0071]    According to yet another variation of Embodiment 3 shown in  FIG. 16 , if D 3  contains an extra GPS module and a GPRS module they start to transmit to P 3  data about patient and patient global position when patient is out of the RF Zigbee range as in D 1 . a.  Communication by Zigbee protocol then stops. As a further variant, if D 3  contains an extra Wi-Fi module it starts communicating with S 3  and P 3  through Wi-Fi when it is out of RF Zigbee range as in D 1 . c.  Then communication by Zigbee protocol stops and D 3  starts to communicate directly with in locations not covered by I 3  or repeaters. Then when the patient comes out the area covered by Wi-Fi, the controller CT stops transmissions to Wi-Fi and starts GPS and GPRS modules. Since communication between D and P or I can be done through GPRS. In Embodiments 2 and 3, data can be transmitted to a nurse smart phone. A smart phone can play the role of server for all nurses and patients. And from smart phone to wifi and facility server. Data can be recorded in smart phone and/or in facility server. This way there is no limit to the communication range. If GPS is in D and location coordinates are transmitted through GPRS to nurse smart phone  118 , the patient can be located wherever he is outside facility. 
         [0072]    For record keeping there are multiple charts and recording possibilities in the system MA to assist facilities with managing staff as well as patients. All patient activity is recorded and stored indefinitely. This is useful to view daily activity as well as to record proof of care. Staff work load can be balanced by identifying needy patients and those less demanding. Daily activity clears by 24 hour periods. The administration computer  22  keeps complete records. In smaller facilities, day and long term records can be kept on the same computer and accessed by password. 
         [0073]    Thus the present invention allows one nurse to handle more than one patient with one nurse receiving alarms from multiple patients, or it permits one detector/sensor to be exclusive to one nurse pager only. The system detects more than one urination or defecation in the same diaper, the system detects each urination and defecation separately in same diaper with reusable sensors since the sensors do not contact urine or feces inside diaper. The system measures urine and defecation quantity and flow. Frequency and number of incidents per patient and other patient data are recorded on administrative charts for later reference. A nurse is alerted as necessary, by sound and pager message, per the settings individually programmed for each patient. An alert sounds or is displayed on a nurse&#39;s pager if incidents are too frequent or too rare. This can show hidden patient problems like diarrhea, constipation, infection, prostate problems, diabetes, or cystitis. 
         [0074]    The system can be used with less than all functions activated. It is suitable for a nursing home or a hospital, but also for homecare and for infants or pets. The system is useful for child monitoring, newborns, and youngsters, mentally challenged children and/or adults with propensity to wander. A simpler and less expensive system for home care use would includes only a Multi-sensory device  10  and a Pager P 1 . Customers can purchase the complete package or a single feature eg. Turn Check. Additional features can be purchased online, one at a time, by end user, and activated immediately when approval is granted by provider. Patient needs are programmed individually and activated/deactivated as health needs change. 
         [0075]    Among the additional features which can be set and recorded in the MA are i) Body temperature alert, which measures patient body temperature and alerts nurse if fever, can be provided; Diaper wearer body temperature and fever; setup, alarm and display of said body temperature and fever; ii) Ambient temperature alert, which measures air temperature around patient and alerts if is cold or hot; Diaper wearer surrounding air temperature; setup, alarm and display of the air temperature; iii) Nurse Reminder of Patient appointments can be set in nurse&#39;s pager. v) The Nurse Call button on device D 1  for patient use is provided, vi) Diaper wearer breath motion and non motion; alarm and display of said breath non motion. Breath count; Setup, alarm and display of said breath count; vii) Diaper wearer position when he or she lies in bed; setup, alarm and display of said position or orientation; Stand up position of diaper wearer and when it occurs; setup, alarm and display of said stand up position; Diaper wearer sit down position; display of said sit down position; viii) alarm if patient is in the process of rising from a seated position; Fall of diaper wearer; alarm and display of the fall; ix) Detect and display of stepping; stepping count, cadence and diaper wearer speed display; Diaper wearer run detection; alarm and setup; Distance walked or run; setup, alarm and display of said distance; Diaper wearer speed; display of said speed; Direction walked or run; Setup, alarm and display of said direction; Diaper wearer movement intensity; display of said intensity; setup and alarm if said intensity and timing when it occurs; x) Diaper wearer presence in a certain perimeter with a settable alarm radius. Setup, alarm and display of said perimeter; Diaper wearer passing through certain doors and passing direction. Setup, alarm and timing when it occurs; Distance between diaper wearer and attendant pager. Display of said distance; Diaper wearer global position. Display and alarm; xi) Oxygen content in blood; setup, display and alarm of said oxygen content; Pulse detection and count, display and alarm; Blood pressure, display and alarm; xii) Diaper wearer video display on said Pager display, on PC monitor, on Internet and on mobile phone. 
         [0076]    While a number of exemplary aspects and embodiments have been discussed above, those of skill in the art will recognize certain modifications, permutations, additions and sub-combinations thereof. It is therefore intended that the following appended claims and claims hereafter introduced are interpreted to include all such modifications, permutations, additions and sub-combinations as are within their true spirit and scope.