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EaseAlert: Tactile Firefighter Alerting System

E

Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Sleep Habit
Heart Rate
Sleep

Treatments

Device: Legacy Alerting System
Device: Intervention 2: EaseAlert Standalone

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this research is to test a commercially viable Fire Fighter Altering System (FFAS) comprised of proprietary wearables and optional bed shakers called BunkAlerts; collectively "personal alerting devices" as an alternative approach to the traditional fire alarm system used in fire stations. Participants (fire fighters) will be asked to take part in the study to investigate the impact of the new FFAS on cardiovascular response and sleep. This study includes three phases: 1) baseline, 2) implementation of EaseAlert FFAS with traditional alarm, and 3) implementation of EaseAlert FFAS without traditional alarm. Participants will be asked to wear an Actigraph wGT3x-BT and Polar H10 device to record sleep and heart rate data for 12 days at work in addition to EaseAlert FFAS device for 8 out of the 12 days at work. They will also be asked to complete a questionnaire and complete daily journal entries.

Full description

Sudden cardiac death (SCD) has been the leading cause of on-duty death (ODD) in the fire service over the past several decades, accounting for 51.6% of all ODDs in 2019. The primary factors that contribute to SCD among firefighters are overexertion and stress, and SCD is most likely to occur during fire suppression and alarm response. When an emergency occurs, firefighters are alerted/awoken by loud mechanical bells. This high noise level may induce a stress response triggering a cardiovascular event. In fact, "high levels of environmental noise fuel cardiac risk" by stimulating the amygdala and inflaming the arteries. While other companies have attempted to modernize alerting systems, they failed to address the problem of stressful alarms because they focus on alerting "stations" not individual firefighters. A significant need exists to develop a less stressful alerting system for firefighters. The objective of this SBIR Phase I R43 research study is to develop a commercially viable Fire Fighter Alerting System (FFAS) comprised of proprietary wearables and optional bed shakers called BunkAlerts. Collectively "personal alerting devices," the wearables and BunkAlerts enhance the alerting process for firefighters by replacing jarring audible alarms with tactile alerts delivered to the firefighter's wrist. This alternative approach is designed to significantly decrease tachycardic responses associated with legacy alerting systems. Meeting this need has the potential to reduce firefighter ODDs and improve the quality of life for the 15.4 million firefighters around the world. The feasibility of EaseAlert's FFAS is reinforced by preliminary data collected during field testing with six (6) fire departments in three (3) states where EaseAlert's prototype FFAS ("Gen 1") successfully delivered over 10,000 alerts to firefighters called to an emergency with no calls missed. The potential for the FFAS to reduce stress and SCD risk among firefighters is supported by preliminary data which shows that: 1) noise triggers a startle response and 2) tactile alerts are associated with positive valence and high arousal. The proposed research will be accomplished with two aims: Aim 1 - develop a commercially viable FFAS and Aim 2 - determine the effectiveness of the FFAS in reducing cardiac reactivity and improving sleep. EaseAlert will leverage the Gen 1 FFAS as a foundation for developing its Gen 2 FFAS outlined in Aim 1. Aim 2 will test two study hypotheses in a within-subjects pilot clinical trial design: (H2.1) that EaseAlert will result in a significant reduction in the stress response to alarms compared to traditional auditory alerting systems, and (H2.2) EaseAlert will result in a significant improvement in sleep efficiency.

Enrollment

47 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Participants must meet the following inclusion criteria:

  • Firefighters must be willing participants be over the age of 18 years
  • Have worked at their department for a minimum of two months (career department only) so that circadian rhythm is adjusted to the schedule
  • No extended absence or shift trading among the firefighters foreseen during the trial.
  • Nighttime call/run volume averaging at least one emergency call
  • Interest among the crew members to participate in the trial

Inclusion criteria for departments will include, but not be limited to:

  • Willingness to participate by department's chief and/or his/her designee
  • No past experience with the EaseAlert FFAS
  • Four or more firehouses/stations
  • Willingness to identify a departmental point of contact for collaboration with the research team
  • Interest among crews to test the new alert system.

Exclusion criteria

  • non firefighter

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

47 participants in 1 patient group

Single arm - intervention
Experimental group
Treatment:
Device: Intervention 2: EaseAlert Standalone
Device: Legacy Alerting System

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Joel M Billings, Ph.D.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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