
m-CARDS pocketECG
Sample Report
All in One Holter Monitor
14 – 28 days of diagnostic capability
High diagnostic yield
(auto-detect/auto-send technology allows close to 100% sensitivity/specificity)
Training, support and supplies provided by m-Health
Continuous 3-channel monitor
What is it?
- This test is best for correlating (or ruling-out) whether an arrhythmia is the cause of symptoms felt by the patient
- Report includes PVC/PAC and AF onset/ offset, total number of episodes and total duration
- Ease of testing increases patient satisfaction and compliance for faster diagnosis and treatment
- Final reports are read by one of 300 Ontario Cardiologists using the m-CARDS™ system
- All data stored securely on servers in Canada
m-CARDS Patch+
Sample Report
No cost to the clinic or clinicians
Very fast turnaround time for reporting.
Continuous 3-channel monitor
What is it?
- This test is best for correlating (or ruling-out) whether an arrhythmia is the cause of symptoms felt by the patient
- Arrhythmia monitoring involves 72 hours of ECG diagnostics to monitor transient symptoms
- Final reports are read by one of 300 Ontario Cardiologists using the m-CARDS system
In the News
Seniors feel confident about using online tech
Canadian Healthcare Technology, September 25, 2019 TORONTO – A new survey commissioned by AGE-WELL, a federally funded Network of Centres of Excellence, and conducted by Environics Research, shows that 58% of Canadians aged 65+...
Bureaucratic, technological barriers impeding public’s desire for digital health innovations, conference told
A panel of health experts at the Canadian Medical Association health summit in Toronto offered a long list of reasons why virtual visits – patients interacting with a physician or nurse online via a home computer or smart phone – still account for only one per cent of medical appointments.
read moreThe Digital Revolution is coming. Are we ready?
“They were oblivious to their obvious bias. They failed to adapt,” Alejandro Jadad, founder of
the Centre for Global eHealth Innovation at University Health Network in Toronto, said in the
keynote address at the Canadian Medical Association (CMA) Health Summit last week.
Canada’s health system, Dr. Jadad said, is very much like Kodak in 1975, clinging rather
pathetically to an analog way of thinking in an increasingly digital world. It is threatened by
inertia.
read more