HCCYLGApr 17

Driving Assistance System for Ambulances to Minimise the Vibrations in Patient Cabin

arXiv:2604.1604726.23 citationsh-index: 39
AI Analysis

For ambulance services, this system addresses the problem of patient discomfort and potential harm from vehicle vibrations, but the results are incremental and limited by fixed weighting factors.

The paper presents a driving assistance system for ambulances that uses an accelerometer and GPS to measure vibrations in the patient cabin, and an ANN classifier (97% accuracy) to recommend routes minimizing vibrations. The system prefers low-vibration routes when time differences are under 6%, but defaults to the shortest route when time differences exceed 20%.

The ambulance service is the main transport for diseased or injured people which suffers the same acceleration forces as regular vehicles. These accelerations, caused by the movement of the vehicle, impact the performance of tasks executed by sanitary personnel, which can affect patient survival or recovery time. In this paper, we have trained, validated, and tested a system to assess driving in ambulance services. The proposed system is composed of a sensor node which measures the vehicle vibrations using an accelerometer. It also includes a GPS sensor, a battery, a display, and a speaker. When two possible routes reach the same destination point, the system compares the two routes based on previously classified data and calculates an index and a score. Thus, the index balances the possible routes in terms of time to reach the destination and the vibrations suffered in the patient cabin to recommend the route that minimises those vibrations. Three datasets are used to train, validate, and test the system. Based on an Artificial Neural network (ANN), the classification model is trained with tagged data classified as low, medium, and high vibrations, and 97% accuracy is achieved. Then, the obtained model is validated using data from three routes of another region. Finally, the system is tested in two new scenarios with two possible routes to reach the destination. The results indicate that the route with less vibration is preferred when there are low time differences (less than 6%) between the two possible routes. Nonetheless, with the current weighting factors, the shortest route is preferred when time differences between routes are higher than 20%, regardless of the higher vibrations in the shortest route.

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