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Home » News » Mobile/Wireless | Quality and Safety
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Smartphones speed heart attack treatment

December 22, 2010 | Molly Merrill, Associate Editor

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NEWARK, NJ – A program that uses smartphones to transmit ECGs from the ambulance to the cath lab at the University Hospital in Newark, N.J., is showing improvement in patient outcomes.

The program, called STAT-MI, is made possible through a $100,000 grant made by the Verizon Foundation to the Foundation of University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey (UMDNJ),

STAT-MI uses wireless technologies and software, linked to a network, to transmit high-resolution electrocardiograms (ECGs) from the ambulance directly to a cardiologist at the hospital, who is able to view ECG readings on their smartphone within 90 seconds of transmission by the EMT. If the cardiologist verifies that the patient is having a heart attack, the patient is brought directly to the cardiac catheterization laboratory.

The STAT-MI program has already been demonstrated to improve patient outcomes," said Marc Klapholz, MD, professor of medicine and director of cardiology, UMDNJ-New Jersey Medical School and director of cardiology, UMDNJ-The University Hospital. "Funding from the Verizon Foundation enables us to extend our ability to use these life-saving technologies."

While STAT-MI has only been in existence for a short time, its life-saving potential has already been shown to decrease patients' time to treatment by as much as 131 minutes. Patients treated through the service have smaller heart attacks, shorter hospital stays and lower death rates.

Twelve ambulances from the University Hospital Emergency Medical Service are outfitted with STAT-MI technology.

"Verizon knows that technology can make a tremendous difference in the communities where we work and live," said Douglas W. Schoenberger, vice president of corporate responsibility for Verizon New Jersey. "This multi-year partnership with the Foundation of UMDNJ has been a worthwhile investment for the Verizon Foundation because it clearly demonstrates how a technology-based application can create tremendous, live-saving benefits for patients experiencing potential heart attacks."

The STAT-MI program, which also received seed funding from the Healthcare Foundation of New Jersey, has already received national recognition, including a place on TIME magazine's list of top medical innovations.

According to the National Heart Lung and Blood Institute, approximately 1.1 million heart attacks occur in the U.S. each year, 460,000 of which are fatal. About half of these deaths occur within one hour of the start of symptoms.  Heart muscle starts to die as soon as a heart attack starts, and the longer that treatment is delayed the more muscle dies.

"Every minute counts when someone is having a heart attack," said Klapholz. "By supporting STAT-MI, the Verizon Foundation is helping us deliver life-saving care when time is of the essence."

Related Topics:
  • Marc Klapholz
  • New Jersey
  • NEWARK
  • smart phones
  • smartphone
  • Smartphones
  • University Hospital
  • University of Medicine
  • Verizon
  • Verizon New Jersey
  • Mobile/Wireless
  • Quality and Safety

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