TY - JOUR
T1 - An integrated care solution for the electrocardiogram monitoring
AU - Chow, Josephine S. F.
AU - Hopkins, Andrew
AU - Dimitri, Hany
AU - Tie, Hui
AU - Williams, Rachael
AU - Rajaratnam, Rohan
AU - Gopinath, Sumana
AU - Lazarovska, Suzana
AU - Andrijevic, Stanica
AU - Premawardhana, Upul
AU - Gonzalez-Arce, Veronica E.
AU - McDougall, Alan
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Purpose This study has demonstrated how technology may contribute to integrated care solutions by comparing conventional ward telemetry (WT) to a wearable ECG monitor (S-Patch) to detect atrial fibrillation (AF) in patients with stroke. Design/methodology/approach 51 patients admitted for stroke workup were recruited across two major tertiary centres to compare WT monitoring for two days versus S-Patch for four days in the detection of AF. The efficacy to detect AF using both technologies was assessed via data extractions and medical officer review. A matrix was used to measure nursing/patient satisfaction and setup/resource times were assessed. Findings Patients (84-94%) and nursing staff (75-95%) preferred the S-Patch wearable technology. Non-parametric tests indicated significant time saving for removal of S-Patch versus WT [2.2 min vs 5.1 min (p = 0.00)]. Efficacy of S-Patch to detect AF following medical officer review was greater than WT, with seven patients identified with AF by S-Patch versus one using WT. The S-patch had a false positive rate of 78%. Research limitations/implications The S-Patch is sensitive in the detection of AF; however, it showed a high false-positive rate with automated reporting. This study has provided insight into the details of delivery of integrated healthcare using wearable technology. Originality/value The technology and partnership were the first-in-kind in Australia. The S-Patch had a higher detection rate of AF compared to WT which allows patients to be anti-coagulated appropriately for the prevention of further stroke. The results of this study will be ideally placed to inform future policy in integrated healthcare using new technologies.
AB - Purpose This study has demonstrated how technology may contribute to integrated care solutions by comparing conventional ward telemetry (WT) to a wearable ECG monitor (S-Patch) to detect atrial fibrillation (AF) in patients with stroke. Design/methodology/approach 51 patients admitted for stroke workup were recruited across two major tertiary centres to compare WT monitoring for two days versus S-Patch for four days in the detection of AF. The efficacy to detect AF using both technologies was assessed via data extractions and medical officer review. A matrix was used to measure nursing/patient satisfaction and setup/resource times were assessed. Findings Patients (84-94%) and nursing staff (75-95%) preferred the S-Patch wearable technology. Non-parametric tests indicated significant time saving for removal of S-Patch versus WT [2.2 min vs 5.1 min (p = 0.00)]. Efficacy of S-Patch to detect AF following medical officer review was greater than WT, with seven patients identified with AF by S-Patch versus one using WT. The S-patch had a false positive rate of 78%. Research limitations/implications The S-Patch is sensitive in the detection of AF; however, it showed a high false-positive rate with automated reporting. This study has provided insight into the details of delivery of integrated healthcare using wearable technology. Originality/value The technology and partnership were the first-in-kind in Australia. The S-Patch had a higher detection rate of AF compared to WT which allows patients to be anti-coagulated appropriately for the prevention of further stroke. The results of this study will be ideally placed to inform future policy in integrated healthcare using new technologies.
UR - https://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:65569
U2 - 10.1108/JICA-04-2020-0018
DO - 10.1108/JICA-04-2020-0018
M3 - Article
SN - 1476-9018
VL - 29
SP - 61
EP - 71
JO - Journal of Integrated Care
JF - Journal of Integrated Care
IS - 1
ER -