Background

The University of Sydney is undertaking an Atrial Fibrillation (AF) study within ten General Practices. The study involves clinicians utilizing an existing mobile device to ascertain if the patient's pulse indicates a normal result reading or otherwise otherwise. The mobile device will be used as a decision support tool. The AF Topbar app will notify the clinician when patients are eligible for the mobile device.

The AF app will only display a notification, based on the following requirements:

When a patient does not meet the qualifying criteria, the following message will present:

 

The data collected through the AF app in Topbar will be extracted by CAT4 and added to the file sent to 'The George Institute'. The four additional fields added to the file are:

 

Only patients that have data stored in the Topbar database will be able to populate the cells in the CSV. If a patient does have the appropriate data, then the cells will be blank.

 

Displaying the AF app

The AF app is displayed automatically when an eligible patient is opened in the clinical system and shows a small red circle with the number 1 to indicate one new notification.


Atrial Fibrillation App use


Clicking on the tile for the AF app will open the full screen view for the currently opened patient:


 

The screenshot above is missing the 'Device Information' and the 'Study Details' text. In the final version the text displayed will be:

The following text will be displayed regardless of whether a patient meets the qualifying criteria or not.


Device Information

  1. Record the iECG and enter the patient details in the Kardia app (tap ‘edit patient’).
  2. Send the iECG to AliveCare for filing: tap ‘share’, then ‘email’, then ‘AliveCare’
  3. Enter the diagnosis into TopBar > atrial fibrillation and click Save:
    1. Normal: no further action
    2. Possible AF: refer to GP for 12 lead ECG, and provide printed information to the patient
    3. Unclassified: the app could not the your ECG recording as Normal or Possible AF. Conditions such as sinus tachycardia/bradycardia or left bundle branch block may cause an unclassified result. Refer to GP for review and possible 12 lead ECG


Study Details

For further information, please contact:

            Jessica Orchard, Research Coordinator jessica.orchard@sydney.edu.au,

            T +61 2 8627 1664

            Jialin Li, Research Assistant jialin.li@sydney.edu.au,

            T +61 2 8627 5036



When a user wants to record the patients pulse result, delivered and reported through the mobile device, the three following radio button options are available for selection;

A user can only select one at any given point. By default, all options will appear de-selected and the 'Save' button is greyed out.

 

 

Only once a selection has been made the 'Save' button will become active.

 

 

After saving the selection there will be a change to green to indicate the selection has successfully been checked and saved.

 

 

When a user clicks on the save option, the choice of radio button and the date will be saved and stored in the Topbar database. This is how Topbar will know to notify or not notify the next time the same patient record is opened.

The Test Result will be visible to the user during the first 12 months from the date of the Test Result being saved.

Once an outcome of the test (Normal, Possible AF or Unclassified) is recorded, there are no further actions in the AF app. The app has now disappeared from Topbar and will not be shown again for this patient for the next 12 months and then only if the patient still meets the eligibility criteria described in the introduction. It will appear again when the next eligible patient is opened in the clinical system.