A new artificial intelligence-driven health monitoring system called iLive Connect is being rolled out in India, enabling doctors to conduct continuous, 24×7 monitoring of patients from their homes, healthcare officials and developers said. The system combines wearable biosensor devices — including a small patch and a wristband — with cloud-based analytics and a dedicated medical command centre staffed by physicians.
These sensors track essential vital health parameters in real time, such as ECG, heart rate, respiratory rate, blood oxygen saturation (SpO₂), body temperature, blood pressure trends, physical activity and heart-rate variability. The data is transmitted wirelessly to the secure platform and relayed immediately to doctors monitoring patients around the clock.
Unlike traditional health monitoring that typically responds once symptoms have manifested, iLive Connect uses AI-driven predictive analytics designed to detect subtle physiological changes that can signal the early onset of illness before clinical symptoms become apparent. Doctors at the command centre can then intervene quickly — including notifying patients and family members of any potentially harmful changes within minutes — which advocates say could reduce avoidable hospital admissions.
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Developers and medical specialists involved in the project describe iLive Connect as effectively providing an “ICU-like” level of monitoring at home, particularly beneficial for senior citizens, people with chronic illness, and recently discharged patients who require close medical supervision outside hospital settings. An observational study involving hundreds of users indicated a marked drop in hospital readmissions, highlighting the system’s potential impact on patient outcomes.
Healthcare experts say technologies like iLive Connect reflect a broader global shift toward remote, data-driven care models that can help alleviate pressure on hospital systems while empowering doctors to maintain continuous oversight of high-risk patients. Similar AI innovations are also emerging in both clinical and home-based settings worldwide, demonstrating how digital health tools are re-shaping the delivery of medical care.
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