Healthcare technology
Without the hassle
Our sensor is able to understand and interpret activity within the patient room. Everything is computed locally and privately.
Seeing
The sensor captures images of what is going on in the room, and has infrared which allows it to work 24 hours a day.
Understanding
The images are sent to the box for analysis. The important behaviours and activities are extracted, and the images are deleted. This whole process happens multiple times a second.
Communicating
We boil down the most important information and send it on to the staff on whichever device they are using.
We use AI to improve patient well-being
through body movement and room analysis
Anonymity, security, privacy
Everything is computed locally and privately
Anonymised data
No one gets access to what the sensor sees. As soon as the computer has understood what the sensor has seen, any image data is deleted. Our system functions without the need for any personal information from anyone who is being monitored.
Local
Processing of the images is performed without it ever leaving the device. Only the processed data is then sent on to the staff and for further statistical analysis.
Secure
The behavioural data that is shared with the staff is encrypted and protected so that only the people who need to see the information will be able to see it.
Tailored setups for your ward
Covering every room size
Together we’ll go through your location and work out what configuration will make most sense for you, making sure you get the most out of the system.



Tried and tested
technology
5,000+
Hours of annotated training data
3,000,000+
Monitoring hours
3,000+
Hours spent on-site onboarding and developing with staff
700+
Care staff members helped
AI: Beyond the hype
Our proven legacy of innovation
To make it work you have to make it work, which is why we have assembled a team of talented and driven AI engineers working to expand and refine what the system is capable of. Working with us gives you access to this teams creativity and skills.
