Healthy wireless signals in hospitals

Published: 7-Jun-2016

John Spindler of Zinwave discusses how hospitals can overcome the common challenges when providing in-building wireless coverage

By John Spindler, vice president of product management at Zinwave

Longer life expectancies and a growing global population are pushing medical resources to the limit and there is intensifying pressure on the healthcare industry – particularly the NHS – to look at new ways to boost efficiency and save lives, while keeping costs to a minimum.

Many leading hospitals are already embracing wireless technology as a means of enhancing both patient care and productivity

As such, many leading hospitals are already embracing wireless technology as a means of enhancing both patient care and productivity.

The uses for wireless in a healthcare environment have advanced significantly over the last few years. As well as providing comfort and mobility to patients, wireless medical telemetry devices allow hospitals to better manage resources and improve medical efficiency and practices. In addition, patients, visitors and healthcare professionals expect to be able to communicate with families, friends and colleagues at all times.

Wireless challenges

Hospitals come in many different shapes and sizes, and have been built using numerous specialist construction materials, but this can often cause a number of issues. Indeed, the hospital’s building structure can make it extremely difficult to provide ubiquitous in-building wireless services. For example, 4G LTE signal, operating at high frequencies such as 2.6 GHz, simply does not penetrate building walls as well as 2G or 3G services. As such, hospitals will be left with areas that have reduced data rates, or even complete loss of signal, which could be critical in intensive care and special units. What’s more, in hospitals with multiple floors, there will likely be several adjacent cell sites providing signal to the building.

As well as providing comfort and mobility to patients, wireless medical telemetry devices allow hospitals to better manage resources and improve medical efficiency and practices

Therefore, hospital staff and patients’ mobile phones will likely jump from one mobile cell site to another, which can significantly degrade mobile service. To overcome this, there must be a sufficiently-strong signal source inside the building that is able to deliver adequate mobile coverage while ensuring mobile devices stay 'locked on' to the signal.

There’s also the issue of providing enough capacity in hospitals. For example, in high-user-density areas such as a waiting room, mobile capacity can become extremely limited. This is not least because the signal is concentrating on serving the peak crowd of users who are all contacting their families or accessing the internet from their mobile device. These temporary demands on the network can significantly impair mobile service performance and availability. Therefore, hospitals should consider wireless technology that is able to be sectorised and deliver the necessary capacity to each area within the hospital. Sectorisation is actually a long-standing method of expanding wireless network capacity and dates back to macro cells around 20 years ago – it is often used in stadiums or public venues to expand capacity.

Health and safety

Hospitals are obliged to optimise wireless coverage throughout their facilities, not just in A&E departments or the main entry points, but for health and safety purposes. Many hospitals are chosen to be a special coverage location centre point for the emergency services. As such, a robust network is needed in all departments supporting the multiple types of frequency bands used by the fire, police and ambulance services.Poor signal or wireless black spots could ultimately lead to dangerous lapses in patient monitoring and communication systems.

While optimising the wireless signal makes sense, hospital management teams are also worried that the amount of radiation generated as a result of installation could impact equipment and overall safety. To eliminate these safety concerns, hospitals need a solution that’s not only able to provide ubiquitous wireless coverage to areas that are unconnected, but with safety and performance risks kept to an absolute minimum.

Enhancing coverage

In order to overcome the challenges associated with wireless coverage in hospitals, and provide a strong and reliable mobile signal for both critical communication and commercial services, hospital management teams should optimise the network infrastructures with technology such as a fibre-based, wideband active distributed antenna system (DAS).

A wideband DAS is an install-once wireless signal distribution system consisting of small antennas which can fit unobtrusively inside hospital ceilings, meaning there is little disturbance to the hospital building itself. It also brings the signal closer to the users and allows specific services to be easily routed around the hospital to areas where they are needed the most, such as intensive care units.

A truly-wideband DAS is considered to be ‘evergreen’ as it can easily accommodate the addition of new frequencies and services without the addition of new hardware or cabling. This will be critical in hospitals as wireless medical continues to evolve

Hospital wards can often be limited to voice services only for patient and privacy reasons, but with DAS, 4G hotspots can be created in pre-designated communal areas.

When it comes to radiation and interference, the risks with DAS are minimal because emission levels are negligible, but hospital management teams can often carry out a series of tests to determine this, putting staff and patient safety first. One of the key benefits of wideband DAS technology is the system’s network infrastructure, which is standard structured cabling – broadband single mode or multi-mode fibre. This means the system design and installation is a simple and straightforward process, with minimal disruption to the hospital. Wideband DAS systems are also flexible and scalable, enabling upgrades or additions to be quickly implemented without needing any hardware replacements or cabling refits. This offers hospitals a future-proof solution and rapid return on investment (ROI), not least because there are no infrastructure upgrades or cabling overhauls needed.

An ‘evergreen’ hospital

Ultimately, wideband active DAS technology will allow hospitals to benefit from a fast, efficient and cost-effective wireless deployment, with minimal disruption to infrastructure, services, staff and patients.

A truly-wideband DAS is considered to be ‘evergreen,’ which means it can easily accommodate the addition of new frequencies and services without the addition of new hardware or cabling. This will be critical in hospitals as wireless medical continues to evolve and continues to save lives.

You may also like