Research & Observations
MYaccess research explores real-world vascular access challenges observed in emergency and clinical environments. Through frontline observations, clinician feedback, and early prototype testing, we analyze how technology can transform vascular access practice.
Research Focus
What We Study
MYaccess research focuses on the real-world clinical realities of vascular access performed daily by nurses, emergency clinicians, and paramedics.
Our work examines workflow challenges, access failure patterns, clinician experience, and opportunities for technology integration that can improve success rates and patient outcomes.
To ensure that our research follows established ethical and scientific standards, MYaccess Technology LLC has established independent Institutional Review Board (IRB) oversight through an executed authorization agreement with the Biomedical Research Alliance of New York Institutional Review Board (BRANY IRB).
Our observational human-factors study protocol is currently under IRB administrative review.
Transmission Under Medical Gloves
Technology Adoption Patterns in Vascular Access
Piezoelectric Signal Validation
Prototype Development Ergo Proto V3.5
(Documentation Pending)
Early-stage development explores a wearable ultrasound-assisted vascular access system designed to integrate directly into nurse-centered clinical workflow.
Documentation Pending
WHO-Based Clinical Analysis
Ergonomic Testing in Critical Care Procedures
(Documentation Pending)
Ergonomic evaluations examined how wearable ultrasound integration may support clinicians during high-intensity procedures such as CPR, airway management, and bedside interventions. Documentation Pending.
Research Overview
FAQ's
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What type of research does MYaccess conduct?
MYaccess research focuses on real-world vascular access challenges observed in emergency departments and frontline clinical environments. Through clinician feedback, observational data, and early prototype testing, we explore how technology can improve vascular access success rates and workflow efficiency.
What does the (n≈35) clinical observation dataset represent?
The n≈35 dataset represents preliminary observational feedback collected from clinicians regarding vascular access workflow, vein localization difficulty, and current technology usage patterns in routine practice.
Are these formal clinical trials?
No. The materials presented here represent exploratory research, observational insights, and early-stage development work intended to guide future clinical studies and technology design.
What is the goal of this research program?
The goal is to explore how wearable ultrasound guidance and improved workflow integration can support clinicians in achieving faster, more reliable vascular access while reducing repeated insertion attempts.
Will more data be added to this section?
Yes. As additional observational data, prototype testing results, and clinical insights are collected, new materials and visualizations will be added to this research section.
How does this research relate to the MYaccess device?
The research presented here informs the design and development of the MYaccess wearable ultrasound system. Observational findings, ergonomic testing, and prototype experiments guide how the technology integrates into real clinical workflows.
