
DIY heart monitor rolled out to cut hospital waiting lists
The device looks like a small patch which is stuck to the skin, while traditional devices see patients hooked up to numerous wires and monitors.
After the new tool is worn for a few days, patients can post the device back – which will cut out the need for appointments to fit and remove the equipment.
The information from the monitor is then assessed using an artificial intelligence (AI) tool, Cardiologs, which produces a report which is then assessed by either a physiologist or a doctor.
It can be used to investigate conditions include atrial fibrillation, tachycardia or heart blocks.
Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust is the first hospital in the country to roll out the device, with hopes that the device will soon be used across other NHS trusts.
The Trust said it will still use traditional devices, known as Holter monitors, on some patients who are in hospital, but many of those who are outside of hospital will be able to access the new ePatch, which is made by Philips, to use in the comfort of their own homes.
The new ePatch (right) is said to be more convenient than a traditional Holter monitor (left) (Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust/PA)
It has estimated that the use of the patches will double its productivity levels for diagnosing heart rhythm problems.
Dr Iain Sim, consultant cardiac electrophysiologist, told the PA news agency: 'The purpose of the device is to record the heart rhythm – to collect electrical signals from the heart – and to try to understand a bit about the patient and what they are experiencing and whether that can be explained by their heart rhythm.
'This smaller device allows us to measure at the moment up to 10 days
'The benefits of it are that it is smaller and more convenient, rather than different wires all over the place.
'We are able to put them on faster and we're able to reduce our turnaround times for reports and to get results back to patients faster.'
The patch can monitor a person's heart rate for 10 to 14 days (Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust/PA)
He said that traditional Holter monitors are attached by trained physiologists but there is a shortage of these staff members at present.
'Because these are more straightforward, we've got specialist nurses who can be quite easily trained to apply them,' he added.
Suzanne Jordan, associate director for medicine at Frimley Health, said the patches can even be sent out to patients for them to attach themselves.
The feedback from the monitors are developed into reports for medics which are categorised in a traffic light system, she said.
'Green is perfectly fine – within normal limits; amber may need a clinician to review the report; red means potentially significant pauses or arrhythmia that need kind of an urgent review,' she said.
'It's been really positive – staff and patients really like it.
'We can post the patches to patients – there's explicit instructions there in terms of how to put it on, what to do if there's a problem, and also just to send it back as well.
'Once it comes back, it gets downloaded and the turnaround times are great.'
Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust said the move has been welcomed by patients and staff (Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust/PA)
Ms Jordan added: 'If you think of the bigger picture, it means that we're going to be able to manage our patients quickly.
'We've been running clinics by seeing maybe 30 patients in one day, whereas before, we were probably seeing 14 maximum – so we've kind of doubled our productivity.
Asked about the conditions which will be monitored with the devices, Dr Sim added: 'Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a really important and common condition that we pick up with these devices, and we're increasingly looking at whether we can use them to help detect AF that's not symptomatic, and whether people are increased risk of stroke that we don't know about.
'The other conditions would relate to other forms of types of tachycardia, so fast heart rates, or episodes of very slow heart rates, such as heart blocks of different degrees, where patients may have palpitations or they may have fainting or syncope.
'So it allows us to monitor all of those heart rhythms.'
On the use of AI to review the data from the monitors, he added: 'I think it's natural for everyone to be concerned whenever you put the term 'AI' into something, but these are pretty well tested algorithms that still have human oversight.'
Mark Leftwich, managing director for Philips UK and Ireland, said: 'We're really excited to be working with Frimley Health to make heart monitoring easier and more comfortable for patients.
'Studies show Philips ePatch can spot up to 2.5 times more clinically relevant heart rhythm issues than the traditional Holter monitors – so not only is it more comfortable to wear, it can actually help catch issues that might have been missed before.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


ITV News
32 minutes ago
- ITV News
'We wish we'd never asked for help': Family's hurt as thousands with learning disabilities locked up
Josh Standish loves riding his bike. Everyday for an hour he's allowed to leave the hospital in Hull, where he's locked away, and ride around the nearby park with his dad, who struggles to keep up. It's the highlight of each day for him. Josh is 21 and has severe learning disabilities and autism. For the past four years he's been locked away in secure units. Josh's needs became more complex when he was 17. Desperate for help, his parents, Garry and Sara, turned to social services. He was admitted to an inpatient unit and his parents were told it would just be for three months while he was assessed. But he never came home. "It's the biggest regret of our lives," Garry and Sara said. "We wish we'd never asked for help. "He was taken from us and locked up." Josh was detained under the Mental Health Act and moved to a different hospital 100 miles from their home. According to his parents, he suffered physical and mental abuse at the hospital which was eventually closed down. "He's gone through absolute hell," Sara said. "I don't think anybody will ever realise unless they've actually seen it. "For one person to go through that much trauma in his life; it's so sad." When ITV News first met Josh nearly two years ago, he was at a hospital closer to home. Staff declared he was ready to be discharged but there was no adequate community care in place and Josh became trapped in the system. His parents told ITV News that Josh had deteriorated significantly since. He had been repeatedly physically restrained and injected with drugs to sedate him."Sometimes I'd go in and he was laid in his own urine because he just couldn't be bothered to get up," his mother Sara told ITV News. "I've had to hold him while changing his sheets because he couldn't stand up. "He was slurring his words, it was absolutely heartbreaking. "No mother wants to walk out, leaving her child like that but you have no choice." His father, Garry, said doctors at the facility had told him that Josh was "over medicated" most of the time."In the first meeting that we had, we were told that it was well over the limits of roughly around 80 per cent over drugged, over medicated," he said. Josh has continued to be in long term segregation and spent almost two months isolated in a room with nothing but a toilet in the corner. Any communication was through a small hatch in the door. That's where he spent his 21st birthday, with his parents forced to pass presents through that hatch. Last year, Josh's parents were told he would be moved to a forensic unit which houses people involved with the criminal justice system. "I was just ready to give up," Sara said. "I was so close to just having a breakdown and saying, 'I don't feel like I can be a mum right now' because I was just in such a bad place but then who would fight for Josh?" Garry and Sara were told it was the only option. But it wasn't. Melissa, an occupational therapist and specialist practitioner from HOPES, arrived. HOPES is a NHS programme which has been running for three years to support people like Josh come out of long term segregation. Staff are trained to work intensely with the patient and family. The model focuses on compassion and dignity and avoids using any kind of restraint, except as a last resort for a short amount of time. Exclusive analysis by Mencap for ITV News has revealed people with learning disabilities and autism locked up in mental health units are disproportionally restrained. They make up about 16 per cent of patients in mental health units, but receive more than a third of the total restraints used. Melissa worked intensively with Josh helping him to come off his medication. "I remember when Josh first came to the hospital and, obviously, he was on so many drugs they had to wean him off slowly and he did have some ups and downs while coming off them and it resulted in Josh needed to go in seclusion," Sara said. "Melissa sat on the floor with him at the other side of the hatch and she was holding his hand and Josh said to her, 'why can't I come out?'" About 70 per cent of people who have been supported by HOPES have come out of long term segregation. But funding for the HOPES programme was only ever allocated for three years. Now, it's up to local trusts to decide if they can afford the programme and the services of practioners like Melissa . Funding for Melissa to continue working with Josh stopped a few weeks ago. Josh's parents say he's struggling without her help. "It's cruel," Sara said. "For Josh, she was here and then gone. "She was amazing and helped him so much; we're terrified he'll regress and never come out." Former Care Minister Norman Lamb, who chaired the HOPES project, told ITV News priority needed to be given to people like Josh. "It is an enduring scandal to continue with the practice of long term segregation," he said. "It's a truly inhuman treatment and it's usually because of a lack of understanding. "The NHS has a moral obligation to maintain this programme; it's clearly working." Josh's case is not rare. Hundreds of others like him are trapped in hospital, detained under the Mental Health Act and unable to leave because there is nowhere for them to go. ITV News has been investigating the continuing scandal of people with learning difficulties being locked away in segregated hospital units. Currently, more than 200,000 people with learning disabilities and autism are detained in inpatient units in England. NHS figures show 40 per cent of those people do not need to be there. Since 2011 successive governments have pledged to reduce the numbers of people with learning disabilities and autism in hospital by 50 per cent. That target has never been met. Exclusive analysis by Mencap for ITV News revealed it would take eight years to achieve. In April, the government introduced a new, much lower target – a 10 per cent in year reduction by March 2026. Garry and Sara have a very clear message for the Health Secretary Wes Streeting. "I would ask him why they're locking away people who have got learning disabilities?" "Would they lock a five year old child away? Because that's what Josh is mentally. "If it was his family, if it was their child, would they be happy with him being locked up?" ITV News put that question to the Health Secretary. Wes Streeting MP admitted the treatment for people like Josh was unwarranted and cruel. "In our ten year plan, the emphasis shifts from hospital to community," he said. "So those adults who are hospitalised for no reason, care could be provided within the safety and dignity of their homes. "I want that for everyone, particularly this group in society who have poor health outcomes. "I take the challenge from the family on the chin. If this was my mum, dad, brother would I tolerate it? No. "I'm here as Health Secretary to be a voice and a champion for patients and care users, so when parents put those challenges to me I'll able to take those challenges on." Mr Streeting insisted the Mental Health Act Bill would stop people with learning disabilities and autism being inappropriately detained. But Dan Scorer, Mencap's Head of Policy, said it was not so simple. "The Government has said clearly that this change in the law will only get 'switched on' when there is sufficient community support in place," Mr Scorer said. "However, there is no plan for making sure sufficient community support will be in place any time soon. "This is a serious flaw. There is a serious risk that the key law change for people with a learning disability and or autistic people will never be activated." Garry and Sara said Josh was excited about a future outside of hospital."He wants a job, he wants to work with bikes, he wants to go to college to learn to read and write," Sara said. "He wants a life that's not locked away in a hospital. "Surely he deserves that?" Josh asks his parents daily when he can come out but they can't give him an answer. Until there is proper community support in place Josh continues to be locked up."It's easy to lock people like Josh away and just forget about them rather than get them out there," Sara said. "It's an easy life to lock them away, drug them, keep that one quiet. "It's only when they've got someone who will actually speak up for them and say, no, this isn't right. "Obviously, we are there for Josh all the time, so we know what's going on. "But not every patient in them hospitals has someone to look out for them. So then people that are just stuck there and being drugged and nobody's seen it.


The Independent
43 minutes ago
- The Independent
GB Energy could fund solar panels on religious buildings, Miliband suggests
A scheme which will see solar panels placed on the roofs of hundreds of schools and hospitals could be expanded to include religious buildings, Ed Miliband has suggested. The Energy Secretary told the Commons he is 'enthusiastic' about widening the scope of Great British Energy's first major project, following an influx of requests to do so. A £200 million investment to put rooftop solar on schools and NHS sites was announced by the Government earlier this year, with the aim of saving hundreds of millions of pounds on energy bills and to free up cash to reinvest in frontline services. Councils and community groups will also receive funding to build local clean power projects, such as community-owned onshore wind, rooftop solar and hydropower in rivers, as part of the scheme. Speaking during a statement on climate and nature, Labour MP Sarah Owen (Luton North) said 'there is a huge part of our communities, the faith communities' who want to 'tackle' the climate and nature crisis. She added: 'So while we welcome Great British Energy's roll out of solar panels on hospitals and on schools, could he outline any support for religious buildings that also want to do the same?' Mr Miliband replied: 'Following the successful roll out to schools and hospitals, we've now got a lot of requests to expand this scheme, and I'm very enthusiastic about doing so, and it's something we're looking at.' Under the scheme, around £80 million will support 200 schools and £100 million will go to 200 NHS sites in England. Scotland will get £4.85 million, Wales £2.88 million and Northern Ireland £1.62 million for power projects including community energy and rooftop solar for public buildings. During the statement on Monday, Mr Miliband also pledged to deal with the 'grid zombies'. This came in response to Labour MP Ruth Cadbury (Brentford and Isleworth), who asked: 'What steps is the Energy Secretary making to prioritise grid connections, and will he commit to reforming the grid queuing system so that projects essential to decarbonise our transport sector are brought forward more quickly?' He replied: 'We are dealing with the zombies, the grid zombies, the zombie queue, and that reordering of the queue is precisely designed to open up the queue to projects like the ones she talked about. 'And my honourable friend, the energy minister, is having a series of round tables with DfT (Department for Transport) on precisely this subject.'


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
The militant strike ringleader who now controls the BMA
The militant Corbynista who helped inspire the first doctors' strikes in 40 years is now in charge of the British Medical Association (BMA). Dr Thomas Dolphin, a consultant anaesthetist in London, beat four other candidates to become chairman of the BMA council last month and will now lead it for at least three years in what is already looking like a painful tenure for Wes Streeting. Ironically, had things gone the way Dr Dolphin had planned, he would be in the House of Commons alongside the Health Secretary. But the Labour Party did not shortlist him to run as an MP at last year's general election, and now he faces them instead as agitator-in-chief. The 47-year-old has a base salary in excess of £126,000 and has spent the past 20 years building on his political ambitions, playing a pivotal role in turning the union into the militant group of strikers that it is today. He is part of a group of doctors who have 'ideologically captured' the BMA, according to insiders, and been labelled by critics as 'Trots' – a reference to the hard-Left ideals of Leon Trotsky, the Marxist revolutionary. Last year, Dr Dolphin was responsible for putting forward a motion – that was passed without debate – to reject the independent Cass review into children's transgender healthcare, which had called on the NHS to stop prescribing puberty blockers to children. More than 1,000 union members signed an open letter in revolt, and around 200 medics quit as a result, insiders claim. An activist during the days of Jeremy Corbyn, he campaigned alongside John McDonnell, the former shadow chancellor and socialist, and has been the election agent for Dawn Butler, the London MP for Brent East, in the last three elections. His rise to the top of the BMA has coincided with increasing levels of political activism and dissonance among members. He has been a critic of the Government and an outspoken member of the union since the days of Tony Blair – when the BMA says doctors were last paid fairly. In 2007, a young Dr Dolphin championed the BMA's calls for Patricia Hewitt, the former health secretary, to resign over a chaotic online application system for junior doctors that resulted in medics not being offered job interviews. He rose to become chairman of the union's junior doctors' committee and in 2012, supported doctors' first industrial action since the 1970s over pension reforms. He has been a hardline union activist and advocate of striking as a means to achieve results ever since. He made media appearances backing a series of junior doctor walkouts in 2016, despite by this point being a consultant and member of the BMA's consultant committee and council. In 2023, he fronted the senior doctors' own campaign for pay rises, claiming consultants had seen real-terms cuts to pay of 35 per cent since 2010, as they timed strikes to coincide with the junior doctors' walkouts and the Conservative Party conference. Although now he says, the union is 'non-partisan' and he is in a 'non-partisan role'. 'As in, I don't have any political affiliation as chair of council,' he told the Guardian last week. He also warned that the 29 per cent rise the junior doctors – now called resident doctors – are demanding is 'non-negotiable' and could mean strikes go on for years. Mr Streeting has also said that any increase on the 5.4 per cent pay award for 2025-26 was 'off the table', leaving both parties at an impasse. The Health Secretary said it was 'completely unreasonable' that the doctors would strike having received a 28.9 per cent salary uplift in three years. He is set to meet with the BMA's resident doctors' committee this week to see if there is a way to 'avert' the five-day walkout, which begins at 7am on 25 July. The rise of Dr Dolphin and like-minded political activists has coincided with the union increasingly alienating itself from the public and other doctors. Recent polling shows just one in five Britons strongly back the resident doctors' strikes, while senior medics have criticised the walkouts and even quit the union as a result. Its annual general meeting has attracted criticism for its increasing focus on political issues such as Palestine and Israel, its rejection of the Supreme Court's ruling on what a biological woman is and how single-sex care should be delivered, as well as the anti-Cass motion put forward by Dr Dolphin. The new chairman has also already written to Yvette Cooper, the Home Secretary, to criticise the Government's plans to 'restore control to our borders' outlined in the Immigration White Paper. He said plans to increase the years that people, including doctors, must spend in the UK to obtain settlement status from five to 10 years would 'create unnecessary stress and uncertainty', and that the BMA was also 'deeply concerned' about introducing 'stricter English language requirements for adult dependants including spouses'. On taking up the role of chairman last month, he told the BMA's 190,000 members: 'The fight to restore doctors' pay and pensions continues, with colleagues across the country furious that the promised 'journey' towards pay restoration that we were promised has already come to a grinding halt.' With consultants also holding an 'indicative ballot' on industrial action, the upcoming strikes look set to be just the first under Dr Dolphin's reign.