Telemedical ECG Tests Would Save the NHS £120 Million Per Year

Telemedical ECG testing in GP surgeries could cut hundreds of thousands of unnecessary emergency hospital admissions, A&E attendances and referrals to outpatient clinics, saving the NHS over £120 million each year, according to leading cardiac telemedical service provider Broomwell Healthwatch.

Broomwell's service enables fast, accurate diagnosis of heart problems by telephone, allowing patients to receive a full 12-lead ECG test at their local GP surgery in minutes. This eliminates cardiac 'false alarms', helps to avoid the need for emergency admissions, and cuts the inconvenience and expense of patients having to travel to hospital outpatients or diagnostic centres for unnecessary tests. It also relieves pressure on secondary care resources.

Recent data from the use of Broomwell's ECG service in GP surgeries shows that it has saved nearly 30,000 referrals to hospital outpatients or diagnostic centres for tests, in turn saving over £4M for PCTs in the Greater Manchester area in the past year alone. Based on these figures, Broomwell estimates that if its ECG service was available in every English GP surgery, it would save 500,000 referrals for tests and over £70M per year.

In addition, the ECG service has also shown the potential to prevent over 100,000 A&E attendances per year, saving over £50M if deployed nationally, by enabling people with cardiac symptoms to be treated in a primary care setting (GP surgeries or health centres) without needing to be sent to hospital. Combined with the reduction in hospital referrals for tests, this leads to savings exceeding £120M per year.

Joshua Rowe, CEO of Broomwell Healthwatch, said: "Telemedical ECGs have significantly reduced the number of unnecessary referrals to hospitals in the Greater Manchester area and across England, saving millions for the NHS, and the potential for greater savings if the service was rolled out nationally is clear.

"Having completed 170,000 successful ECG interpretations and doing some 1,500 ECGs per week, the service has improved patient care by cutting unnecessary hospital referrals for tests and visits to A&E. This saves stress and worry for patients, frees up vital resources, and is helping to transform standards of cardiac care in the NHS."

Broomwell's primary telemedical services provide PCTs and GPs with 24-hour expert diagnostic support for 12-lead ECGs and Arrhythmia Monitoring from a team of expert cardiac clinicians, enabling patients to receive quick convenient care, closer to home. Practice nurses carry out ECG recordings at the GP surgery and transmit the results over the phone or web connection, where a team of expert cardiac clinicians interpret the ECG trace and give an immediate verbal diagnosis, followed by a written report that is sent to the GP within minutes and can be filled into the standard electronic patient files. Broomwell's own data shows that 90% of even symptomatic patients were managed by their local GP following a diagnosis from the service, without needing a hospital referral.

Results from the use of Broomwell's ECG service in the Greater Manchester and Cheshire Cardiac and Stroke Network (GMCCSN) over a two-year period across 9 PCTs in the area, showed that use of the service prevented 63% of referrals for ECGs, to outpatients.

Broomwell also offers a home monitoring service, Cardiac Direct, to post-operative patients, those recovering from a heart attack or who are frequent visitors to hospital for chest-pain symptoms. This helps patients to manage their own conditions, eliminates cardiac 'false alarms', provides reassurance and can further reduce unnecessary hospital A&E admissions.

As part of the service, patients are given personal, palm-sized full 12 lead ECG units and 24-hour telephone access to Broomwell's monitoring centre, which is staffed by a highly trained cardiac team. Patients call the centre (which has their medical records), describe their symptoms and transmit their ECG. This enables the centre to make an informed diagnosis. This accelerates referral to A&E if treatment is needed, or gives immediate reassurance in the majority of cases where hospitalisation is not necessary.

Further services provided by Broomwell for GP surgeries are Arrhythmia Monitoring, including a rapid interpretation service for 24-hour tapes and 8-day loop monitors, as well as a Telehealth Monitoring service for congestive heart failure (CHF), and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).

The company has also introduced its Arrhythmia Watch, which is worn by patients with suspected arrhythmia and enables them to capture and record episodes as they occur. This again reduces the need for unnecessary hospital visits for diagnostic tests, saving stress and inconvenience whilst also saving the NHS a significant amount of money. Early results from over 3,000 tests using the watch showed that no arrhythmia was present in 80% of patients.

Most Popular Now

Herefordshire and Worcestershire Health …

Herefordshire and Worcestershire Health and Care NHS Trust has successfully implemented Alcidion's Miya Precision platform to streamline bed management workflow across seven community hospitals in Worcestershire. The trust delivers community...

A Shortcut for Drug Discovery

For most human proteins, there are no small molecules known to bind them chemically (so called "ligands"). Ligands frequently represent important starting points for drug development but this knowledge gap...

New Horizon Europe Funding Boosts Europe…

The European Commission has announced the launch of new Horizon Europe calls, with a substantial funding pool of over €112 million. These calls are aimed primarily at pioneering projects in...

Cleveland Clinic Study Finds AI can Deve…

Cleveland Clinic researchers developed an artficial intelligence (AI) model that can determine the best combination and timeline to use when prescribing drugs to treat a bacterial infection, based solely on...

New AI-Technology Estimates Brain Age Us…

As people age, their brains do, too. But if a brain ages prematurely, there is potential for age-related diseases such as mild-cognitive impairment, dementia, or Parkinson's disease. If "brain age...

With Huge Patient Dataset, AI Accurately…

Scientists have designed a new artificial intelligence (AI) model that emulates randomized clinical trials at determining the treatment options most effective at preventing stroke in people with heart disease. The model...

Radboud University Medical Center and Ph…

Royal Philips (NYSE: PHG, AEX: PHIA), a global leader in health technology, and Radboud University Medical Center have signed a hospital-wide, long-term strategic partnership that delivers the latest patient monitoring...

GPT-4, Google Gemini Fall Short in Breas…

Use of publicly available large language models (LLMs) resulted in changes in breast imaging reports classification that could have a negative effect on patient management, according to a new international...

ChatGPT fails at heart risk assessment

Despite ChatGPT's reported ability to pass medical exams, new research indicates it would be unwise to rely on it for some health assessments, such as whether a patient with chest...

Study Shows ChatGPT Failed when Challeng…

With artificial intelligence (AI) poised to become a fundamental part of clinical research and decision making, many still question the accuracy of ChatGPT, a sophisticated AI language model, to support...

Virtual Reality Shows Promise in Fightin…

A new study published in JMIR Mental Health sheds light on the promising role of virtual reality (VR) in treating major depressive disorder (MDD). Titled "Examining the Efficacy of Extended...

AXREM and Highland Marketing Partner to …

AXREM represents member companies that collectively provide UK hospitals with most of their diagnostic medical imaging technology, and radiotherapy equipment. The association has seen substantial growth in recent years, with membership...