| > Using pictures instead of signals, allowing to do automation with existing (or obsolete) tools, is a true innovation IMHO. > 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. |
You don't understand, because you keep assuming echo or medical professionals will be needed, to keep doing what is now medically relevant.
If the same tweaks can be done at the next step (automating readings from obsolete machines, say by recognizing some heart landmarks to align and measure doppler flows purely though software) yes, the end result is still an "intervention" ("take this pill")
But if everything leading to that intervention can be optimized, or even large parts of it money will be saved.
The current approach is not set in stone: this new approach could help those who have no healthcare professional, can't even pay for the extras (modern EKG, confirmation by echo etc) but can pay for basic EKG + ACEi if needed.
These same person which could get nothing in the current approach could at least be better treated