State of the art of mobile health technologies use in clinical arrhythmia care
Sridhar A, Cheung J, Lampert R, Silva J, Gopinathannair R, Sotomonte J, Tarakji K, Fellman M, Chrispin J, Varma N, Kabra R, Mehta N, Al-Khatib S, Mayfield J, Navara R, Rajagopalan B, Passman R, Fleureau Y, Shah M, Turakhia M, Lakkireddy D. State of the art of mobile health technologies use in clinical arrhythmia care. Communications Medicine 2024, 4: 218. PMID: 39472742, PMCID: PMC11522556, DOI: 10.1038/s43856-024-00618-4.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchPersonal health managementElectronic medical record integrationHealth technologiesData managementSensor technologyMedical record integrationHealth care professionalsMobile health technologyArrhythmia careConsumer health technologiesRecord integrationSmartphone-basedCare professionalsQuality oversightTarget populationHealth managementPhotoplethysmographyTechnologyClinical practiceCareLong-term rhythm monitoringManagement of cardiac arrhythmiasSensorLearning From a National Quality Improvement Collaborative for Brief Resolved Unexplained Events.
Hochreiter D, Sullivan E, DeLaroche A, Jain S, Knochel M, Kim E, Neuman M, Prusakowski M, Braiman M, Colgan J, Payson A, Tieder J. Learning From a National Quality Improvement Collaborative for Brief Resolved Unexplained Events. 2024, 153 PMID: 38229546, DOI: 10.1542/peds.2022-060909.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsClinical practice guidelinesClinical practice guideline publicationEmergency departmentQI collaborativeTesting adherenceElectronic medical record integrationCare of emergency departmentQuality improvementMedical record integrationMedical record reviewMulticenter quality improvementCollaboration periodBRUE criteriaAmerican Academy of PediatricsCaregiver perspectivesImprove careAcademy of PediatricsLower-risk infantsRisk classificationRecord integrationClinical pathwayMitigate barriersRecord reviewDocumentation practicesPractice guidelines
This site is protected by hCaptcha and its Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply