logo
DIY heart monitor rolled out to cut hospital waiting lists

DIY heart monitor rolled out to cut hospital waiting lists

Leader Live16 hours ago
Traditional monitors can require lengthy set-up by a trained physiologist, but the new kit can be sent out to patients in the post for them to attach themselves at home.
The device looks like a small patch which is stuck to the skin, while traditional devices see patients hooked up to numerous wires and monitors.
After the new tool is worn for a few days, patients can post the device back – which will cut out the need for appointments to fit and remove the equipment.
The information from the monitor is then assessed using an artificial intelligence (AI) tool, Cardiologs, which produces a report which is then assessed by either a physiologist or a doctor.
It can be used to investigate conditions include atrial fibrillation, tachycardia or heart blocks.
Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust is the first hospital in the country to roll out the device, with hopes that the device will soon be used across other NHS trusts.
The Trust said it will still use traditional devices, known as Holter monitors, on some patients who are in hospital, but many of those who are outside of hospital will be able to access the new ePatch, which is made by Philips, to use in the comfort of their own homes.
It has estimated that the use of the patches will double its productivity levels for diagnosing heart rhythm problems.
Dr Iain Sim, consultant cardiac electrophysiologist, told the PA news agency: 'The purpose of the device is to record the heart rhythm – to collect electrical signals from the heart – and to try to understand a bit about the patient and what they are experiencing and whether that can be explained by their heart rhythm.
'This smaller device allows us to measure at the moment up to 10 days
'The benefits of it are that it is smaller and more convenient, rather than different wires all over the place.
'We are able to put them on faster and we're able to reduce our turnaround times for reports and to get results back to patients faster.'
He said that traditional Holter monitors are attached by trained physiologists but there is a shortage of these staff members at present.
'Because these are more straightforward, we've got specialist nurses who can be quite easily trained to apply them,' he added.
Suzanne Jordan, associate director for medicine at Frimley Health, said the patches can even be sent out to patients for them to attach themselves.
The feedback from the monitors are developed into reports for medics which are categorised in a traffic light system, she said.
'Green is perfectly fine – within normal limits; amber may need a clinician to review the report; red means potentially significant pauses or arrhythmia that need kind of an urgent review,' she said.
'It's been really positive – staff and patients really like it.
'We can post the patches to patients – there's explicit instructions there in terms of how to put it on, what to do if there's a problem, and also just to send it back as well.
'Once it comes back, it gets downloaded and the turnaround times are great.'
Ms Jordan added: 'If you think of the bigger picture, it means that we're going to be able to manage our patients quickly.
'We've been running clinics by seeing maybe 30 patients in one day, whereas before, we were probably seeing 14 maximum – so we've kind of doubled our productivity.
Asked about the conditions which will be monitored with the devices, Dr Sim added: 'Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a really important and common condition that we pick up with these devices, and we're increasingly looking at whether we can use them to help detect AF that's not symptomatic, and whether people are increased risk of stroke that we don't know about.
'The other conditions would relate to other forms of types of tachycardia, so fast heart rates, or episodes of very slow heart rates, such as heart blocks of different degrees, where patients may have palpitations or they may have fainting or syncope.
'So it allows us to monitor all of those heart rhythms.'
On the use of AI to review the data from the monitors, he added: 'I think it's natural for everyone to be concerned whenever you put the term 'AI' into something, but these are pretty well tested algorithms that still have human oversight.'
Mark Leftwich, managing director for Philips UK and Ireland, said: 'We're really excited to be working with Frimley Health to make heart monitoring easier and more comfortable for patients.
'Studies show Philips ePatch can spot up to 2.5 times more clinically relevant heart rhythm issues than the traditional Holter monitors – so not only is it more comfortable to wear, it can actually help catch issues that might have been missed before.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Wes Streeting says junior doctors' strike action is ‘unconscionable'
Wes Streeting says junior doctors' strike action is ‘unconscionable'

Times

time38 minutes ago

  • Times

Wes Streeting says junior doctors' strike action is ‘unconscionable'

The health secretary has said that junior doctors' actions are 'unconscionable', as a member of his own family is waiting for an 'inevitable' call to tell them their procedure has been cancelled due to the impending strikes. Wes Streeting, speaking at the health and care select committee, said that he 'cannot fathom' why 'any doctor in good conscience would make it harder for managers to make sure we have safe staffing levels'. The comments come after resident doctors, as junior doctors are now known, who are members of the British Medical Association (BMA) voted to strike for five days from July 25. They have demanded a 29 per cent pay rise, which they have said would bring them back to 2008 pay levels. He said: 'We can mitigate against the impact of strikes, and we will, but what we cannot do is promise that there will be no consequence and no delay, no further suffering, because there are lots of people whose procedures are scheduled over that weekend period and in the period subsequently. 'The NHS has to recover from the industrial action, who will see their operations and appointments delayed,' Streeting told the House of Commons' committee. 'I have a relative in that position,' he added. 'My family are currently dreading what I fear is an inevitable phone call saying that there is going to be a delay to this procedure. And I just think this is an unconscionable thing to do to the public, not least given the 28.9 per cent pay rise.' BMA representatives and the health secretary are due to meet this week, 'to see if we can avert strike action', Streeting said. He added that the doctors had 'chosen confrontation' and that he did not see 'a reasonable trade union partner in the RDC section of the BMA at this time'. Streeting added: 'The other thing that I have found actually shockingly irresponsible about the BMA's position is their leaders seem to be telling their members not to inform their trusts or their employers if they're going out on strike. 'Now, I might not agree with the BMA strike action, but I do accept they have a right to strike. I do accept that they follow the rules in order to go on strike. 'What I cannot fathom is how any doctor in good conscience would make it harder for managers to make sure we have safe staffing levels. So I just think the sort of the BMA's approach to this from start to finish has been completely wrong.' Sir Jim Mackey, the NHS England chief, told the committee that the action would be 'hugely disruptive'. In September, junior doctors voted to accept a government pay deal of 22.3 per cent on average over two years. In the most recent pay award, for 2025-2026, junior doctors were given a four per cent uplift, plus £750 — giving an average rise of 5.4 per cent. There aren't many people who would volunteer to be the public face of the most unpopular junior doctor strikes to date. The task has fallen to 'unashamedly socialist' Emma Runswick, the current deputy chairwoman of the council, and one of the highest-ranking junior doctors in the BMA. The daughter of Jeremy Corbyn-backing trade unionists, Runswick has described herself as 'very left wing'. Runwick's mother, Kathy Runswick, is the former chairwoman of the Wallasey Constituency Labour Party. In an interview on the BBC's Today programme on Monday morning, Runswick was asked if she was a 'militant lefty'. In response, she said: 'Oh yeah, I'm left wing. But that doesn't reflect necessarily the whole variety of views that doctors have. And actually it is our aim: if you are on the left, you want the NHS to be an excellent service, you want patients to get good care. I stand by that.' Writing on an online forum under the pseudonym RedRunswick, she wrote before the 2023 strikes: 'This change in attitude has happened because of a concerted organising effort among lefties, and we have pushed the BMA to a slightly more militant position.' When asked if the strikes would 'bring the NHS to its knees', she said: 'We never bring the NHS to its knees, we always leave safe care, emergency critical care is always provided.' She added: 'Our […] repeated overwhelming mandates for strike action show that doctors are fed up of receiving repeated real terms pay cuts. 'Doctors are still starting on less than £18 an hour. I've been qualified over six years, I'm regularly looking after seven or eight wards overnight by myself. I will be the only person with any degree of advanced life support training. I'm earning less than £24 an hour. 'The people who are doing brain surgery at 3am, covering the most critically unwell people, less than £34 an hour. You would pay a plumber more. It is not unreasonable for us to ask for our pay cuts to be reversed.' Runswick's father, Alan, was a member of the Public and Commercial Services Union and also vice-chairman of the Wallasey constituency Labour Party's membership team.

'Doctors must think before downing stethoscopes - strike would be self harm'
'Doctors must think before downing stethoscopes - strike would be self harm'

Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mirror

'Doctors must think before downing stethoscopes - strike would be self harm'

Sympathising with striking workers is in my DNA, so I hope that England's hospital doctors think again before downing their stethoscopes. This is because Wes Streeting has already won the battle for the public's hearts and minds. With recent average pay rises totalling 28.9 per cent – the Health Secretary authorising 22.3 per cent over two years to settle a dispute inherited from the Tories, then this year's inflation-beating 5.4 per cent – have transformed the mood. We could all agree these hard-working, skilled and stressed life-savers are worth even more. But with the NHS finally getting back on its feet, waiting lists falling from Conservative record highs, patients wouldn't be voicing solidarity on picket lines should five days of walkouts start on July 25. Public support for the doctors has collapsed ahead of talks between Streeting and their British Medical Association trade union. New polling finding previously strong approval for industrial action by what are now called resident doctors halving from 52 per cent a year ago to just 26 per cent . As surveyor Ipsos's senior director Gideon Skinner opined, these would be the first doctors' strikes for some years without broad-based support from the public, with Labour voters among them. Pats on the back don't pay bills and muscle is key in disputes, but while participating medics voted overwhelmingly to strike in 2025 (90 per cent) as they did in 2023 (98 per cent), ballot turnout dropping to 55 per cent from 77 per cent signalled some queasiness on the wards. Perhaps their BMA resident doctors' committee co-chair Dr Ross Nieuwoudt was carried away when he suggested 'people are excited to go again', later clarifying docs were 'energised' to strike. How much their living standards are down since 2008 is disputed, the BMA claiming a painful 29 per cent while the Nuffield Trust puts it at a smaller 5 per cent. Still, whichever financial calculation is accepted, doctors have a case as do millions of other workers punished by what the TUC – which the BMA is not affiliated to – billed as the Tory worst wages squeeze since the Napoleonic era. The health and political calculations the BMA must also consider are whether squandering bedside trust and the respect are prices these doctors are prepared to pay in a dispute they could lose industrially as well as publicly. Streeting's up for the fight. Are they? The best outcome for patients would be no strikes followed by an agreed independent review to improve earnings long-term. Wages, jobs and lives are in the balance.

Ozempic-like fat jabs ‘boost men's sex lives – reversing testosterone drops'
Ozempic-like fat jabs ‘boost men's sex lives – reversing testosterone drops'

Scottish Sun

timean hour ago

  • Scottish Sun

Ozempic-like fat jabs ‘boost men's sex lives – reversing testosterone drops'

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) WEIGHT loss jabs could boost men's sex lives, a study suggests. Research found injections like Wegovy and Mounjaro can raise blokes' low testosterone levels. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 1 More than a million people in the UK use weight loss injections (stock image) Credit: Getty The hormone is a big factor in the male sex drive, known as libido, as well as a driver of strength, muscle gain and fat loss. Testosterone levels commonly decline with age or when someone is obese or has type 2 diabetes – amounting to millions of men in the UK. A study by the St Louis University Hospital in Missouri, USA, tracked 110 men in their 40s, 50s and 60s who were being treated with semaglutide – aka Ozempic or Wegovy – or tirzepatide, known as Mounjaro. At the start of their treatment just 53 per cent of the men had normal testosterone levels. Symptoms of low testosterone can include tiredness, weakness and fat gain, feeling depressed, brain fog, and a lack of desire or inability to perform in the bedroom. Treatment increased rate of healthy testosterone After 18 months of treatment with the fat jabs, the proportion of men with healthy hormone levels increased to 77 per cent. Study author Dr Shellsea Portillo Canales said: 'Our study is among the first to provide compelling evidence that low testosterone can be reversed with the use of commonly prescribed anti-obesity medications. 'Doctors and their patients can now consider this class of medications not only for the treatment of obesity and to control blood sugar, but also to benefit men's reproductive health.' More than 1.5million Brits are thought to be taking weight loss injections, known as GLP-1 receptor agonists. NHS prescriptions have rocketed from 1.4million in 2023 to 2.7million in 2024, and more than a million people are paying for them privately. I went from 27 lbs in six weeks with Mounjaro after 15 years of trying to lose weight it has completely changed my life As well as rapid weight loss and treatment for type 2 diabetes, research suggests the jabs may also reduce the risk of some cancers, heart diseases and dementia.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store