A
ground-breaking new, mobile phone app, ‘GrowthMonitor’ places the accurate
measurement of children’s height in the hands of parents and carers.
Preliminary data to be presented at the Society for Endocrinology annual
conference in Edinburgh suggests that the app could reliably identify treatable
growth disorders, much earlier, with significant improvements in child health.
Childhood
growth is a strong indicator of health and well-being in children, but delays
in the diagnosis of growth disorders are common in the UK. In contrast to many
European health systems, monitoring child growth has not been a priority in the
UK and serious, treatable conditions are often diagnosed late. Growth failure
may be the first and only sign of many chronic childhood diseases or indicate a
specific growth disorder such as growth hormone deficiency (1 in 4,000
children), Noonan and Turner syndrome (each 1 in 2,500 children) and SHOX
deficiency (up to 20% of undiagnosed short stature).
A
reliable and accurate method for parents and carers to monitor growth at home
could be a cost-effective and convenient strategy to identify those children in
need of medical referral, empowering parents, raising awareness and reducing
pressure on primary care services.
An
interdisciplinary group, led by Professor Helen Storr, at Queen Mary University
London, has developed a user-friendly app called ‘GrowthMonitor’ to do just
this. Research Nurse, Dr Thilipan Thaventhiran, led the pilot testing of the
‘GrowthMonitor’ app in 79 children, showing that height data measured by the
app were highly accurate when compared to gold standard clinic stadiometer
measurements. The app uses a simple traffic light system, based on
predetermined threshold heights, to inform parents that growth is either normal
(green), to continue monitoring (amber) or to seek medical advice (red).
Dr
Thaventhiran believes “The ‘GrowthMonitor’ app technology could transform our
approach to childhood growth monitoring, by empowering carers to identify
growth problems early, enabling much earlier diagnosis and treatment of growth
disorders. It could also provide reassurance to parents whose children are
growing normally thereby reducing unnecessary anxiety and referrals to
paediatric services.”
Following
the positive pilot data obtained in a hospital setting, further testing is now
underway assessing the app’s usability in the home environment. This phase is
critical in evaluating the app in the hands of parents and carers, away from
the hospital.
Project
lead, Professor Storr says; “In line with the government drive to digitise
healthcare, this type of app-based technology provides a model for healthcare
innovation which is both cost-effective, convenient, accurate and reliable.
Engaging patients, parents and carers in monitoring childhood growth is
empowering and raises awareness of important and potentially treatable
conditions”
Abstract
No comments:
Post a Comment