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by csdvrx
1038 days ago
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Using pictures instead of signals, allowing to do automation with existing (or obsolete) tools, is a true innovation IMHO. > I can't imagine a location having a healthcare provider, ultrasound machine and ACEI accessible while still using an ECG machine obsolete enough to require this. I can imagine many locations having no healthcare provider (or maybe just a nurse) and people putting a vest/belt/whatever whose electrodes are hooked to an obsolete machine, to get a quick estimations of their risk, using special software running on their smartphone to interpret the pictures. Updating software running on the machine would be hard and risky. |
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> I can imagine many locations having no healthcare provider (or maybe just a nurse) and people putting a vest/belt/whatever whose electrodes are hooked to an obsolete machine, to get a quick estimations of their risk, using special software running on their smartphone to interpret the pictures.
So the innovation is that: A low-resource location with no medical expertise (and again is using a 20 year old ECG machine that's somehow still functional) is going to be able to jerry-rig a vest (noting that 12 leads require accurate placement) and then is going to take a picture of the resultant ECG with a smart phone and use a model that's not been validated on an average risk person or noisy ECG data to analyze said picture?
Or we can keep it simple and just use a $50 single lead ECG that plugs into a smart phone and/or is already incorporated into wearables requiring zero medical expertise for accurate use.
https://www.medrxiv.org/content/medrxiv/early/2022/12/04/202...
> to get a quick estimations of their risk
This is my point about not understanding medical relevance.
Phenomenal, you know that you have a risk of left ventricular systolic dysfunction. Now what? What's the next step? Where are you going to get the echo or medical professional?
> Updating software running on the machine would be hard and risky.
You don't have to update the software, you just have to use a machine from the 2000s.