Pilot Study Showcases the Value of Portrait Mobile Continuous Monitoring Solution to Encourage Clinical Intervention While Mitigating Alarm Fatigue
18 November 2024 - 2:00PM
Business Wire
- Published in the Journal of Clinical Anesthesia, results from
the two-phase, 250 patient pilot study show clinicians found a
majority (82%) of the alarms from the wireless and wearable
Portrait Mobile monitoring solution to be informative or useful to
optimize patient care in medical-surgical units.1
- Study findings suggest that continuous monitoring helps provide
critical information to clinicians, enabling them to intervene
effectively before a patient deteriorates.
- Undetected patient deterioration, particularly post-surgery,
can lead to hazardous yet preventable consequences, with 30-day
mortality after surgery representing the third leading cause of
death globally.2
GE HealthCare (Nasdaq: GEHC) today announced the publication of
data from a two-phase pilot study conducted with Cleveland Clinic
in the peer-reviewed Journal of Clinical Anesthesia, highlighting
performance of the wireless and wearable Portrait™ Mobile
monitoring solution in the post-surgical ward environment.
With published alarm rates from critical care and cardiac
telemetry units that number in the hundreds per bed per day,
healthcare systems may be concerned with alarm management in lower
acuity settings.3,4 The results from this study highlight the
potential of the wireless and wearable Portrait Mobile monitoring
solution to provide meaningful alarms for clinicians and help
encourage clinical intervention while minimizing alarm
fatigue.1
The COSMOS (Continuous Ward Monitoring with
the GE HealthCare Portrait Mobile Monitoring
Solution) pilot study compares continuous monitoring with
Portrait Mobile to routine intermittent vital signs assessment
only. Key findings include:
- In the Portrait Mobile group, there was an average of less
than three alarms per patient per day.
- Clinicians found a majority (82%) of the Portrait Mobile
alarms to be informative or useful.
- Portrait Mobile alarms informed clinical
decisions, and the most common nursing intervention was the
initiation of oxygen therapy or increase in the concentration of
oxygen administered to a patient. Clinicians were prompted to
supplement oxygen in about 60% more patients assigned to the
Portrait Mobile group compared to patients with intermittent
monitoring only (49 vs. 33, respectively).
- In the Portrait Mobile group, continuous monitoring and alerts
led to clinical interventions that reduced vital sign
abnormalities by approximately 25%.
“Vital signs are typically checked every 4-6 hours after
surgery. Consequently, there can be a delay between onset of
problems and when they are recognized by physicians and nurses,”
shares Principal Investigator Daniel I. Sessler, MD, formerly with
Cleveland Clinic and now Professor and Vice President for Clinical
and Outcomes Research at UTHealth Houston.* “Results of our COSMOS
study indicate that continuous vital sign monitoring provides
useful information to clinicians without burdening nurses.”
The results from the COSMOS Phase 2 pilot were recently
presented during the American Society of Anesthesiologists 2024
Annual Meeting in Philadelphia. The Phase 2 pilot enrolled 150
post-surgical patients who were randomized to routine vital signs
assessment, or continuous monitoring of respiratory rate, oxygen
saturation and pulse rate with Portrait Mobile. In the Portrait
Mobile group, investigators alerted clinicians when vital sign
values exceeded the designated thresholds based on continuous
monitoring. In both groups, clinicians maintained routine care of
vital signs measurement at 4-hour intervals. The study demonstrated
that real-time alerts from Portrait Mobile reduces the duration and
severity of vital sign abnormalities. Following the COSMOS pilot
completion, a full clinical trial is currently underway
(NCT06133140).
Continuous vital sign monitoring can help alert healthcare
providers to a patient’s decline as it is happening, enabling
timely intervention before a patient deteriorates. A majority of
respondents (74%) of GE HealthCare’s The State of Flexible
Healthcare Delivery survey say that expanding the use of continuous
monitoring technologies within healthcare systems would help
identify deterioration earlier.
“As healthcare systems grapple with workforce shortages and
complex patient management, it is essential that providers be
supported by technology to work efficiently and effectively. In the
ward environment where bedside clinicians are responsible for
multiple patients simultaneously, care should be focused on the
patients who need it most, and this requires ongoing surveillance
and communication,” said John Beard, MD, Chief Medical Officer of
Patient Care Solutions, GE HealthCare.
“Continuous physiologic monitoring solutions can meet the
challenge to alert care teams for changes in patient status but
must be properly configured to optimize actionable alarms and
clinical value. These research findings demonstrate that Portrait
Mobile can meet the needs of patients and clinicians and provide
critical information to support clinical decision making without
causing undue burden.”
Portrait Mobile is part of GE HealthCare’s FlexAcuity monitoring
solutions that are engineered to adapt to rapidly changing patient
needs. GE HealthCare’s technology has been recognized globally for
its design, receiving the iF Design Gold Award for Product Design
in 2022 for Portrait Mobile and an iF Design Award in 2023 for
CARESCAPE Canvas.
For more information on Portrait Mobile and GE HealthCare’s
family of Portrait monitoring solutions, please visit:
https://www.gehealthcare.com/products/patient-monitoring/portrait-mobile
*The COSMOS study was funded by GE HealthCare. The views
expressed are solely those of Dr. Daniel Sessler, do not reflect
the opinions or beliefs of UTHealth Houston and are based on his
own opinions and on results that were achieved in the trial. Since
there is no “typical” hospital/clinical setting and many variables
exist, i.e. hospital size, case mix, staff expertise, etc. there
can be no guarantee that others will achieve the same results.
About GE HealthCare Technologies Inc.
GE HealthCare is a leading global medical technology,
pharmaceutical diagnostics, and digital solutions innovator,
dedicated to providing integrated solutions, services, and data
analytics to make hospitals more efficient, clinicians more
effective, therapies more precise, and patients healthier and
happier. Serving patients and providers for more than 125 years, GE
HealthCare is advancing personalized, connected, and compassionate
care, while simplifying the patient’s journey across the care
pathway. Together our Imaging, Advanced Visualization Solutions,
Patient Care Solutions, and Pharmaceutical Diagnostics businesses
help improve patient care from diagnosis, to therapy, to
monitoring. We are a $19.6 billion business with approximately
51,000 colleagues working to create a world where healthcare has no
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1 Anusic N, et al. Continuous vital sign monitoring on surgical
wards: The COSMOS pilot. J Clin Anesth. 2024 Nov 11;99:111661. doi:
10.1016/j.jclinane.2024.111661. Epub ahead of print. PMID:
39531997. 2 Nepogodiev D, et al. National Institute for Health
Research Global Health Research Unit on Global Surgery. Global
burden of postoperative death. Lancet. 2019;393(10170):401. 3 Gross
B, Dahl D, Nielsen L. Biomed Instrum Technol. Physiologic
monitoring alarm load on medical/surgical floors of a community
hospital. Spring. 2011;Suppl:29-36. doi:
10.2345/0899-8205-45.s1.29. PMID: 21599479. 4 Physician-Patient
Alliance for Health & Safety. ‘Alarm fatigue’ a top-of-mind
concern for U.S. hospitals, finds national survey presented at
Society for Technology in Anesthesia Annual Meeting. Published
January 2014. Accessed October 6, 2023.
https://ppahs.org/2014/01/alarm-fatigue-a-top-of-mind-concern-for-u-s-hospitals-finds-national-survey-presented-at-society-for-technology-in-anesthesia-annual-meeting/
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GE HealthCare Media: Jennifer Purdue M +1 267 593 9735
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