Open Standards - Distributed, Modular, Interoperable
Development Platform - Reference Patient & Reference System
Principal Investigator: Dr. Robert Sweet - Principal Investigator, UW: David Hananel
Award #: W81XWH-14-C-0101
Development Platform - Reference Patient & Reference System
Principal Investigator: Dr. Robert Sweet - Principal Investigator, UW: David Hananel
Award #: W81XWH-14-C-0101
Our Philosophy
Purpose of this Web Site
This web site provides an introduction to MoHSES™, and serves as the primary entry point to information the team will be sharing with our community. In the next few months, as we ready drafts of the standards documents, we will create a link from this page to a document repository with tools for comments and feedback to commence a dialog leading up to the initial release of a comprehensive set of standards document that would allow any interested party to create a plug and play module that would use all resources provided by the development platform.
The terms: MoHSES; Advanced Modular Manikin; AMM; and AMM-Compatible will be Copyrighted and belong to the MoHSES project and platform. As part of the open-standards and open-source nature of the project, they are not intended to be used as a product name, but can be used by products that comply with the standards once published.
A Development Platform
The University of Minnesota and the Center for Research in Education and Simulation Technologies(CREST) are the recipients of DOD Award # W81XWH-14-C-0101.
The deliverables consist of a modular, distributed, interoperable architecture patient simulation with open standards for all the relevant data models, communication protocols, physical connectors, a reference patient and reference hardware for core resources that will be published in draft form for comments, then finalized and published. The software that is part of the core system will be made available under an open source license.
This web site provides an introduction to MoHSES™, and serves as the primary entry point to information the team will be sharing with our community. In the next few months, as we ready drafts of the standards documents, we will create a link from this page to a document repository with tools for comments and feedback to commence a dialog leading up to the initial release of a comprehensive set of standards document that would allow any interested party to create a plug and play module that would use all resources provided by the development platform.
The terms: MoHSES; Advanced Modular Manikin; AMM; and AMM-Compatible will be Copyrighted and belong to the MoHSES project and platform. As part of the open-standards and open-source nature of the project, they are not intended to be used as a product name, but can be used by products that comply with the standards once published.
A Development Platform
The University of Minnesota and the Center for Research in Education and Simulation Technologies(CREST) are the recipients of DOD Award # W81XWH-14-C-0101.
The deliverables consist of a modular, distributed, interoperable architecture patient simulation with open standards for all the relevant data models, communication protocols, physical connectors, a reference patient and reference hardware for core resources that will be published in draft form for comments, then finalized and published. The software that is part of the core system will be made available under an open source license.
Registration
To begin working with MoHSES development models, please follow the steps below:
1. Download and complete the Intake form
mohses_intake.docx | |
File Size: | 28 kb |
File Type: | docx |
Licensing
The links below explain the platform's licensing agreement:
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
Partners
News
Read about MoHSES™, the Advanced Modular Manikin™ in Medical Training Magazine
AMM will be a 'stimulant' for the industry and the market, not a threat. 'What it will allow companies to do is take their limited resources and apply those resources toward expanding their market and capabilities, rather than recreating core. They will be able to leverage this investment by the DoD, broadening their healthcare simulation product portfolio, leveraging others’ strengths and ultimately enhancing the
training for healthcare providers."
1/22/2019 Article
This changed with the Advanced Modular Manikin concept through the Army Research Lab. The Advanced Modular Manikin allows a company to produce part of a manikin that will work with other products from other companies. With the advent of the Advanced Modular Manikin, we can assemble the perfect set of parts for our needs to ensure our medical Airmen are trained in the necessary skills to treat patients both in the clinic and downrange."
5/23/2019 Article