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St. Luke’s system monitors patient vitals

St. Luke’s University Health Network has deployed a groundbreaking patient safety program that harnesses the latest in health care technology, revolutionizing the surveillance of hospital patients’ vital signs.

The program’s 24/7 monitoring alerts clinicians to patient deterioration, resulting in decreased morbidity and mortality. It has already proven successful, saving lives when piloted at St. Luke’s Bethlehem Campus, and now it is being extended to St. Luke’s Monroe and Warren, New Jersey, campuses.

The technology continuously measures a patient’s pulse rate and the amount of oxygen in the blood, in contrast to the traditional practice of monitoring vital signs only periodically. It also is capable of more frequent, automated blood pressure measurement.

St. Luke’s is pioneering this approach nationally. No other hospital in the region and only a handful across the county have this system.

“Checking vital signs every four or eight hours, which is the current standard of care, is inadequate for some patients, whose deteriorating health may go unnoticed during these intervals,” explained Aldo Carmona, MD, chairman of the department of anesthesia and critical care, and senior vice president of clinical integration, who is leading the initiative.

But now, through continuous monitoring, doctors and nurses are immediately alerted as soon as subtle signs of failing health are sensed, enabling a quicker therapeutic response to emergent situations.