# How Medical Monitors Adapt Oxygen Alarms to Reduce False Alerts

> This patent describes an adaptive alarm system for medical patient monitors that dynamically adjusts oxygen saturation thresholds based on recent patient data, aiming to reduce unnecessary alerts.

- **Patent:** US RE47218
- **Original title:** USRE47218E1 - Adaptive alarm system
- **Owner:** Masimo Corp
- **Granted:** 2019
- **Status:** Active
- **Times cited:** 251
- **Field:** medical_devices, consumer_electronics, telecommunications, software

## What it does

This system reduces false alarms in medical patient monitoring by intelligently adjusting oxygen saturation (SpO2) thresholds. It uses an optical sensor to measure a patient's SpO2 values over a first period of time. If these values exceed a first alarm threshold, the system then calculates a new, second alarm threshold for a subsequent period. This second threshold is determined by comparing the patient's current SpO2 to a predefined lower limit. Crucially, the system computes this second threshold with an "offset" from the measured SpO2 value, and this offset shrinks as the patient's SpO2 gets closer to the dangerous lower limit (Claim 1). This means the alarm becomes more sensitive when oxygen levels are already low. For example, if a patient's SpO2 is stable at 95%, the system might set a new, slightly lower alarm threshold of 90%. If the SpO2 then drops to 88%, an alarm would trigger.

## What it does NOT cover

- Does not cover alarm systems that use fixed, unchanging thresholds for oxygen saturation, regardless of the patient's current stable levels.
- Does not cover adaptive alarm systems for other vital signs, such as heart rate or blood pressure, if they do not use the specific SpO2 threshold adaptation method described.
- Does not cover systems where the alarm threshold is adjusted based on a patient's long-term historical data or general population statistics, rather than recent, specific measurements.
- Does not cover alarm systems where the 'offset' for the new threshold does not diminish as the patient's oxygen level gets closer to a dangerous lower limit (Claim 1).
- Does not cover systems that adapt thresholds based solely on trends or rates of change in oxygen saturation, without the specific comparison to a lower limit and diminishing offset.

## The clever bit

The clever part is how the system dynamically adjusts the alarm threshold based on recent patient data and a diminishing offset. As a patient's oxygen saturation approaches a critical lower limit, the alarm threshold becomes tighter, making the system more sensitive when it matters most, without triggering false alarms during stable periods.

## Real-world examples

1. Masimo pulse oximeters
2. Hospital patient monitoring systems
3. Wearable medical sensors for continuous SpO2 tracking
4. Home health monitoring devices for respiratory conditions

## Why it matters

In hospitals, too many false alarms can lead to "alarm fatigue," where medical staff become desensitized to alerts, potentially missing real emergencies. This patent addresses this critical issue by making patient monitoring systems smarter and more responsive to individual patient conditions. By reducing unnecessary alarms, it helps ensure that healthcare providers focus on truly critical events, improving patient safety and staff efficiency.

## Frequently asked questions

### What does How Medical Monitors Adapt Oxygen Alarms to Reduce False Alerts cover?

This patent describes an adaptive alarm system for medical patient monitors that dynamically adjusts oxygen saturation thresholds based on recent patient data, aiming to reduce unnecessary alerts.

### Who owns patent US RE47218?

Masimo Corp owns this patent, granted in 2019.

### When does this patent expire?

This patent is expected to expire on February 5, 2039, when the invention enters the public domain.

### What is patent US RE47218 cited by?

This patent has been cited by 251 later patents that build on its ideas.

### What problem does this patent solve?

In hospitals, too many false alarms can lead to "alarm fatigue," where medical staff become desensitized to alerts, potentially missing real emergencies. This patent addresses this critical issue by making patient monitoring systems smarter and more responsive to individual patient conditions. By reducing unnecessary alarms, it helps ensure that healthcare providers focus on truly critical events, improving patient safety and staff efficiency.

### What does this patent NOT cover?

Does not cover alarm systems that use fixed, unchanging thresholds for oxygen saturation, regardless of the patient's current stable levels.

**Full plain-English explainer:** https://patentbrief.org/patent/us/RE47218/tysabri-dosing

**Original patent:** https://patents.google.com/patent/USRE47218

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_Source: PatentBrief — https://patentbrief.org. Patent facts are from public records; the plain-English explanation is PatentBrief's._
