Thursday, March 8, 2018

A car that can monitor your health

A car that can monitor your health


Engineers develop a car that can monitor your HEALTH as you drive - and take over if you become ill or fall asleep

  • Ford has tested sensors that use body temperature to tell when a driver is having a seizure so the car can steer or park them to safety
  • The car giant believes medical sensors will appear in everyday cars in the future and is developing smart seats and steering wheels
  • It is testing car ambulances in India that contain medical sensors that measure heart rates and could allow doctors to examine patients remotely


Your car could soon monitor your health and even take over driving if you get ill or fall asleep at the wheel, Ford has revealed.

The car giant says it is even developing �car ambulances� that contain an array of medical sensors that could allow doctors to examine people remotely.

It has already tested early versions in India, and hopes to see the sensor features on consumer cars as well.

�Health applications are something that will be an amazing opportunity in car,� Vijay Sankaran, Ford�s Chief Technology Director to the VentureBeat conference in San Francisco.

�In India we are testing functions where doctors can use onboard electronics to take basic diagnostics and transmit them back to a central location.

�The vehicle becomes a sort of mobile ambulance on wheels.�
The firm also says the health sensors will appear in everyday models.

�We�ve also thought about how can we help different kinds of conditions.

For instance, we have tested sensors that can tell when people are having seizures to safely steer or park them. There are the "few too many drinks" or the "drowsy� application."

Ford is also developing smart seats, steering wheels and seat belts with sensors built in.

�Infrared sensors on the steering wheel monitor the palms of a driver�s hands as well as his or her face looking for changes in temperature,� a spokesman for Ford said.

�A downward-looking infrared sensor under the steering column measures the cabin temperature to provide a baseline for comparing changes in the driver�s temperature.

The final sensor is embedded in the seat belt to assess the driver�s breathing rate.�

Mr Sankaran also predicted that self driving cars, such as those being developed by Google, are unlikely to hit roads in the next decade in large numbers.

�The notion of self driving vehicles is on the minds of many- we�ve already been developing this to several years, we have adaptive cruise control, parking - these feature will be constantly introduced.
�We�re paying attention to Google and others. Autonomy has to be something the consumer desires as well.

�A truly autonomous vehicle is probably a number of years away - more like a decade.�


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