Skip to main content

NYC’s Mount Sinai Hospital using Google Nest to monitor coronavirus patients

Mount Sinai, one of New York City’s hospitals hit hardest by the coronavirus pandemic, is using Google’s Nest cameras to monitor patients while limiting the exposure of its workers to the virus.

The health care giant has partnered with Google to install Nest Cams in the rooms of patients with COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus, to help workers better monitor vital signs and reduce the exposure of first responders.

The hospital began installing two cameras in each patient’s room this past week. One Nest camera will be used to check vital signs while the other will be used to communicate with the patient.

“Video from the cameras will be livestreamed to a purpose-built console located in Mount Sinai nurse stations,” said Robbie Freeman, Mount Sinai’s vice president of clinical innovations, in a blog post.

Freeman said the cameras will let the hospital conserve its protective equipment for nurses, keeping them — and nurses — safer.

“It enhances safety for patients because we can keep an eye on everyone from the nursing station, and for our staff, it minimizes the frequency of time spent in-room with COVID-19 patients,” Freeman said.

A Mount Sinai spokesperson tells Digital Trends the healthcare system currently has about 100 cameras up and running. While they did not address questions about security precautions to guard patient privacy against possible hackers gaining access to the cameras, the spokesperson did say Mount Sinai sees a long term potential in using Nest cameras to monitor patients.

“As we monitor the situation and plan for surges, we expect this to be a solution that can be easily ramped up for COVID sites,” said spokesperson Stacy Anderson. “There is potential for this technology to be applied to additional use cases and care settings post the COVID-19 crisis.”

Google will not store the footage from the cameras or have access to it, ensuring patient privacy. The tech giant has vowed to provide 10,000 Nest Cams to Mount Sinai and other health care facilities around the country to assist with patient monitoring.

Chris Morris
Chris Morris has covered consumer technology and the video game industry since 1996, offering analysis of news and trends and…
What is contact tracing and can it help in the fight against coronavirus?
Coronavirus

Lockdowns across the world continue in an effort to help stem the spread of COVID-19, commonly referred to as coronavirus, but now Google and Apple are teaming up to try to help make it easier for us to interact again without so much health risk.

New "contact tracing" technology to be implemented through an app will allow people to see if they have been near someone infected, but the way it works brings up issues of privacy, access to technology, and whether this could really ease restrictions but still “flatten the curve” of infections.
What is contact tracing?
Contact tracing has been around since the 1930s as a way to track the spread of diseases, according to George Rutherford, a professor of epidemiology at the University of California-San Francisco. He told Digital Trends the method uses “real shoe-leather” detective work.

Read more
In China’s hospitals, robots are helping to halt the spread of coronavirus
Orbbec coronavirus robot

As the COVID-19 coronavirus epidemic continues to spread, hospitals in China have turned to a trio of robots to help halt the spread of the flu-type virus. The robots include a food delivery robot, sanitizing robot, and directional guiding robot that can help people avoid unnecessary human contact, hopefully preventing further spread of the virus.

The robots were developed by an international collaboration between several companies, including the U.S.-based Orbbec, which manufactures 3D camera sensors. They are currently being utilized across 10 provinces in Chinese hospitals, with others reportedly planning to implement the technology as well.

Read more
You can now use voice control for Sling TV on Google Nest devices
Live TV Streaming Services

Sling TV has long allowed you to watch your favorite shows live or stream them using your television or handheld device, but you couldn't use your voice to control the service until now. On Wednesday, Google announced that if you have a subscription to Sling, you can use voice commands to watch all of your favorite shows on your Google Nest devices. Even more exciting, you can now watch on more devices. If you have a Google device with a screen, like the Nest Hub Max, you can watch your favorite shows just like you would on your phone or tablet.

"Sling TV allows you to watch your favorite shows live or stream on portable devices. Watch live football games, don’t miss a float during the Thanksgiving Day Parade, and keep up with breaking news," Google employee Rachel Chambers said in an announcement. "Using a remote to flip channels and pause the TV is so 2018. With Sling now on Nest Hub and Nest Hub Max, you can control Sling with your voice."

Read more