Clinical Evidence Series
Philips is proud to showcase a robust and continually expanding body of clinical research encompassing our entire portfolio—from alarm management, early warning scoring, and clinical workflows to cardiology, respiratory care, and obstetrics, as well as situational awareness and clinical decision support. Together, these studies demonstrate our unwavering commitment to advancing patient care and strengthening clinical outcomes through sound, evidence‑based research.
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- Intermittent Hypoxemia and Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia with Pulmonary Hypertension in Preterm Infants
- Histogram analysis for bedside respiratory monitoring in not critically ill preterm neonates
- Reducing Alarm Burden in a Level IV NICU
- The perfusion index histograms predict patent ductus arteriosus requiring treatment in preterm infants
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- Qualitative Exploration of Anesthesia Providers' Perceptions Regarding Philips Visual Patient Avatar in Clinical Practice
- Survey-based qualitative exploration of user perspectives on the philips visual patient avatar in clinical situation management
- Avatar‑based patient monitoring improves information transfer, diagnostic confidence and reduces perceived workload in intensive care units
- Pediatric Anesthesia Providers' Perspective on the Real-Life Implementation of the Philips Visual Patient Avatar
- The Visual Patient Avatar ICU Facilitates Information Transfer of Written Information by Visualization: A Multicenter Comparative Eye-Tracking Study
- User Perceptions of Avatar-Based Patient Monitoring for Intensive Care Units: An International Exploratory Sequential Mixed-Methods Study
- Using Visual Patient to Show Vital Sign Predictions, a Computer-Based Mixed Quantitative and Qualitative Simulation Study
- Improving Visual-Patient-Avatar Design Prior to Its Clinical Release: A Mixed Qualitative and Quantitative Study
- User Perceptions of Different Vital Signs Monitor Modalities During High-Fidelity Simulation
- Visual Attention of Anesthesia Providers in Simulated Anesthesia Emergencies Using Conventional Number-Based and Avatar-Based Patient Monitoring: Prospective Eye-Tracking Study
- Avatar-based versus conventional vital sign display in a central monitor for monitoring multiple patients
- Comparing classroom instruction to individual instruction as an approach to teach avatar-based patient monitoring
- Situation Awareness-Oriented Patient Monitoring with Visual Patient Technology
- The mechanisms responsible for improved information transfer in avatar-based patient monitoring: multicenter comparative eye-tracking study
Disclaimer
Results are specific to the institution where they were obtained and may not reflect the results achievable at other institutions. Results in other cases may vary.