Clinicians using visual patient avatar in operating room
Patient monitoring

Visual Patient Avatar

A new way to see your patient's vitals takes shape

Visual Patient Avatar translates the wealth of information from Philips IntelliVue patient monitors into visual patient data using an avatar that displays color, shape and animation. This innovative approach to monitoring aims to improve the growing concern of errors related to situational awareness, responsible for up to 80% of anesthesia incidents1.

Patient Monitoring

Visual Patient Avatar

Improving situational awareness with Philips Visual Patient Avatar

Activating a new sense in the OR: peripheral vision
Studies indicate that care providers can only directly look at a monitor about 5% of the time3. Visual Patient helps care providers to see colors and movements in their peripheral view without looking directly at the monitor. This enables the physician to continue to observe the surgical field while still perceiving relevant information from the monitor. By activating peripheral vision we’re activating an entirely new connection to the monitor and patient.
Peripheral vision thumb
A new level in clinical decision support
Philips Virtual Patient Avatar is designed for use in the operating room and supports all clinical skill levels. It translates numerical vital signs data into an avatar using color, shape and animation and helps you distinguish between stable and dynamically changing conditions, so you can act before parameter alarming sets in. Virtual Patient Avatar features a simple, functional, innovative design, for one-glance holistic recognition of significant changes in patient status.
Clinical decision support
Innovation inspired from aviation
Flying a plane and caring for a patient involve continuous evaluation of critical data. Inspired by synthetic vision in aviation, the Visual Patient Avatar was originally developed by a team of licensed pilots and anesthesiologists who saw the similarities of the cockpit and the OR and sought to bring these concepts into the fast-paced operating room.
Clinician using visual patient avatar in operating room
Footnotes
  1. Schulz et al. Frequency and type of situational awareness errors contributing to death and brain damage: a closed claims analysis. Anesthesiology 2017; 127: 326e37
  2. Tscholl et al. Using an animated patient avatar to improve perception of vital sign information by anaesthesia professional. Br.J.Anaesth. 2018, 121, 662-671
  3. Ford S, Birmingham E, King A, Lim J, Ansermino JM. At-a-glance monitoring: covert observations of anesthesiologists in the operating room. Anesth Analg. 2010 Sep;111(3):653-8. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0b013e3181e627d4. Epub 2010 Jun 25. PMID: 20581165.
  4. Product features may not be available in all geographies. Please check with your Philips representative for complete portfolio availability.
Disclaimer
Results are specific to the institution where they were obtained and may not reflect the results achievable at other institutions. Results in other cases may vary.