Find Out How Fall Detectors Work
Find Out How Fall Detectors Work
Those facts triggered a response from the technology industry: electronic fall detectors. These devices — mostly worn as pendants around the neck, on wristbands, clipped to pants or built into smartwatches — send an instant alert if they detect that the wearer has suddenly fallen to the ground or floor. Electronic fall detectors “can be important in getting people to emergency or urgent care sooner and prevent complications that can arise from lying in one position for an extended time,” says Hilaire Thompson, a professor at the University of Washington who studies traumatic brain injury and injury prevention.
A short loss of gravity or a sense of weightlessness A jarring impact A period of motionlessness and a horizontal or tilted position Accelerometers are sensitive and sophisticated. They can, for example, “distinguish a fall from the act of taking something off a shelf or walking down stairs,” says Marketing Director Kate Wahl at Medical Guardian, a Philadelphia-based medical alert systems company. After the sensors detect the motion and hard impact of a fall, the device typically triggers an alarm that’s loud enough for others in an area to hear. Many devices can also dial 911 and selected personal contacts for help using Wi-Fi, cellular signals or even landline connections. Plus, devices embed GPS coordinates. These can be relayed to emergency contacts to pinpoint your location and find you sooner.
How Does a Device Know When You ve Fallen
Fall detectors contain tiny sensors programmed to recognize unusual motion
Getty Images Nearly 36 million each year, and a fifth of those result in injuries, according to the federal .Those facts triggered a response from the technology industry: electronic fall detectors. These devices — mostly worn as pendants around the neck, on wristbands, clipped to pants or built into smartwatches — send an instant alert if they detect that the wearer has suddenly fallen to the ground or floor. Electronic fall detectors “can be important in getting people to emergency or urgent care sooner and prevent complications that can arise from lying in one position for an extended time,” says Hilaire Thompson, a professor at the University of Washington who studies traumatic brain injury and injury prevention.
How a fall detector does its job
At the core of any fall detector is the accelerometer. Its tiny electronic sensors measure movement on three different axes: Right and left Forward and backward Up and down And the sensors register the unique motion of a fall:A short loss of gravity or a sense of weightlessness A jarring impact A period of motionlessness and a horizontal or tilted position Accelerometers are sensitive and sophisticated. They can, for example, “distinguish a fall from the act of taking something off a shelf or walking down stairs,” says Marketing Director Kate Wahl at Medical Guardian, a Philadelphia-based medical alert systems company. After the sensors detect the motion and hard impact of a fall, the device typically triggers an alarm that’s loud enough for others in an area to hear. Many devices can also dial 911 and selected personal contacts for help using Wi-Fi, cellular signals or even landline connections. Plus, devices embed GPS coordinates. These can be relayed to emergency contacts to pinpoint your location and find you sooner.