Yes, its a must have for Christmas, a future aid to the non medical and an aid to the medics.
A copy could be sent directly to the Cardiac Dept.
It is accurate for what it does, I wouldn't buy one, expensive, but it should sell well.
So , if your taking your own ECG , you can't interpret the result .
So do you take it once a week say and then send it to this company to analyse .
After all it's not like taking your own blood pressure , where you know if a reading is high or low
I am always wary of ecgs with inbuilt interpretation. The one in my GP practice said MI when it wasn't so the youngish doctor who didn't seem have the skills to check it had me wasting a long and boring day in A and E.
rowan it is hardly a diagnostic tool and basically diagnosis AF which could be dangerous.
ECG changes in MI are not the only pointer to a heart attack and with this machine it doesn't offer sophisticated diagnostic facilities.
The Americans have been using something similar for 20years plus.
Just af, hardly seems worth it, wasn't there a similar one being advertised a few years ago,
Don't think there was much take up, as it wasn't advertised for long.
If all the device doses is to flag up an irregular rhythm, you might just as well buy a cheap blood pressure monitor. Most seem to check for arrhythmia every time you use them. (Mine certainly does. It kept finding it too during my radiotherapy, which is known to increase b.p. and to induce minor arrhythmia in some patients, but things seem to be back to normal now in that respect).