Abstract

The lack of a dedicated device to remind chronic patients when to take their medications, the difficulty in quickly pressing an SOS button, and most importantly the delay in communication between the time of an accident and contact with care takers or hospitals were the three factors that served as the inspiration for the project. A study found that prompt treatment could preventable most 85% of deaths brought on by minor and major heart attacks, strokes, and shortness of breath. Therefore, a visible SOS button would be adequate A side from that, data demonstrate that it is detrimental to one's health to take prescriptions as prescribed and to take the incorrect medication at the incorrect time. In addition, News18 reports that each year 36,579 persons pass away in motor vehicle collisions, 36,213 in two-wheeler collisions, 31,997 in truck and lorry collisions, and nearly 45,000 in incidents involving other modes of transportation. A delay in bringing the patient to the hospital accounts for over 76percent of deaths in each vehicle. Guardians were unable to reach the injured in half of the cases, or the victim was not helped to get to the hospital in time. In such a scenario, a device or technology that detect

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