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29 Aug 2008

Verizon teams with MCG to test cutting-edge technology

- 11 Feb 2008
By Medical College of Georgia   
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Drs. Max Stachura, Elena V. Khasanshina and Guy Reed are working to determine if a wireless device, similar to a smart phone, can be used by cardiologists in rural areas...
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A handheld device that could mean the difference between life and death for some heart attack victims is under development with input from doctors at the Medical College of Georgia.

With a $50,000 grant from the Verizon Foundation, the MCG Center for Telehealth is working to determine if a wireless device, similar to a smart phone, can be used by cardiologists in rural areas to read electrocardiograms transmitted by first responders.

“The Verizon Foundation is very interested in using technology to improve healthcare delivery for all people whether they live in an urban area or are in a rural location,” says Dr. Max Stachura, a lead investigator on the grant, director of the MCG Center for Telehealth and Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar in Telemedicine. “In cardiac events, you typically have 60 to 90 minutes to act. In rural areas, treatment decisions often have a lot more to do with distance than time.”

The basic idea, Dr. Stachura says, is that if cardiologists can see a patient’s EKG immediately, they can make important treatment decisions such as whether to have first-responders deliver clot-busting drugs at the scene or drive further to a hospital better equipped to treat the patient. Electrocardiograms are standard tests that show the heart's electrical activity.

“At larger hospitals, like MCG Medical Center, there is a cardiologist there 24 hours a day, seven days a week,” he says. “Rural areas, on the other hand, may lack resources to the extent that a longer drive to a better-equipped hospital is a wise trade-off.”

 
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