@ShahidNShah
Apple Heart Study Identifies AFib in Small Group of Apple Watch Wearers
Preliminary results from the Apple Heart Study show the potential health benefits of wearables. Researchers from the Stanford University School of Medicine partnered with Apple to conduct a virtual observational study with more than 400,000 participants. The study used the Apple Watch’s irregular rhythm notification (IRN) system to detect atrial fibrillation (AFib). The results showed 0.5% of participants received irregular rhythm notifications. For those who were notified, 21% received and wore an ECG patch. Of those, Afib was confirmed 34% of the time. The positive predictive value of the overall study was 71%, however, this increased to 84% for the subgroup who also used an ECG patch. It should be noted that the study has not yet been published in a peer-reviewed journal.
Continue reading at acc.org
Make faster decisions with community advice
- Change Healthcare Releases the 9th Annual Industry Pulse Survey
- Bill Gates says he talked with Google employees about AI, health care
- Top pharma use cases for the cloud
- What to know before putting healthcare claims data in the cloud | Healthcare IT News
- ConnectedLife partners with Ocean Protocol to advance diagnosis and treatment of Parkinson’s Dise…
Next Article
-
Change Healthcare Releases the 9th Annual Industry Pulse Survey
Healthcare executives are increasingly worried about business model disruption due to the influx of new entrants, processes, and technologies into the healthcare industry. According to Change …
Posted Mar 21, 2019business modelsurvey