Today in my clinic, a patient brought me her atrial fibrillation burden history on her iPhone and it cost her less than a $10 co-pay. For $1.99 US, she downloaded the iPhone app Cardiograph to her iPhone.
Every time she feels a symptom, she places her index finder over the camera on the phone, waits a bit, and records a make-believe rhythm strip representing each heart rhythm. With it, comes the date and time. When the rhythm is in sinus, she learned that her heart rhythm was typically in the 60's at rest:
When the rhythm was in afib, it was considerably higher and sometimes displayed an irregular rhythm:
or sometimes it displayed an error message:
I got a relative picture of how often she was having afib and she got the opportunity to help me with her care.
Was this a medical device? No, it was an iPhone app.
Was it perfect? No it wasn't. I certainly couldn't differentiate frequent PAC's or PVC's from atrial fibrillation reliably. It was NOT an EKG after all. But we were past that point in her evaluation. I just needed to know how often she was having her known paroxysmal atrial fibrillation and she wanted to keep a convenient record of her episodes.
Was it helpful in this case? Absolutely.
More importantly, she just saved herself and the health care system a ton of money.
Welcome, my friends, to the era of patient-empowered, individualized medicine and a whole new era of patient care. Now, if we can just keep the FDA from screwing things up.
-Wes
PS: I have no commercial interest in the Cardiograph app and do not endorse it as a standard of care, but merely use this case to demonstrate how innovation can facilitate cheaper, equally-effective health care in some cases. I'd also like to thank my patient for allowing me to use her screen shots.
3 comments:
Great article. Do you have a twitter account?
K.I.S.S. Keep It Simple Stupid. Sometimes the simple things are the best and easiest. I have always loved an educated and enpowered patient. They are usually fun to take care of.
People should be careful of the different applications they use. Some of them are just too good to be true. Application developers should find basis about their applications. They should not be used to fool people.
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