New York|HL
Digital technology like mobile devices, social media, visual media and crowd sourcing could aid in swift response to the patient and thus, boost their survival odds.
Smartphone apps and other digital technology have the potential to provide rapid emergency care for cardiac arrest, heart attacks and strokes, says researchers.
“When seconds count, early recognition of the symptoms of cardiac arrest, heart attack or stroke and quick action can make a huge difference in whether someone lives or dies or has serious complications afterwards,” said Raina Merchant from Penn Medicine Center for Health Care Innovation — a US-based health care organisation.
Smartphone apps to view brain images for stroke and Face Time videoconferencing apps to assess stroke patients by a remote neurologist may also be helpful.
“Digital platforms can support existing efforts to educate people about what to do in an emergency. Learning what to do – including how to perform Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and recognising the symptoms of stroke – is something many people can do that can save lives,” Merchant added.
However, inaccurate information being provided via digital tools could lead to medical errors costing lives, cautioned the authors.
For the study, published in the journal Circulation, the team reviewed scientific studies to evaluate current knowledge on the effectiveness of digital strategies at improving emergency cardiac and stroke care.
According to the researchers, some studies on digital strategies have shown positive results, such as a Swedish study that used a mobile phone application to alert volunteers within 500 meters of a cardiac arrest victim to respond and start CPR.
It found that 62 per cent of the volunteers with the app started CPR, while only 48 per cent of bystanders without the app started CPR.
A Japanese study found that when emergency department personnel sent pictures of 12-lead ECGs via their smartphone to interventional cardiologists for interpretation, the smartphone method shaved 1.5 minutes off the time clinicians needed to diagnose a patient, compared to sending the images via fax.