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Call for Decision Support for Electrocardiographic Alarm Administration Among Neonatal Intensive Care Unit Staff: Multicenter, Cross-Sectional Survey

Call for Decision Support for Electrocardiographic Alarm Administration Among Neonatal Intensive Care Unit Staff: Multicenter, Cross-Sectional Survey

Several studies have reported that alarm problems associated with electrocardiographic (ECG) monitors were the most prominent among all devices with high sensitivity and low specificity in clinical settings [3]. An observational study by Cho et al [4] revealed that ECG alarms accounted for 81.9% of the total 2184 alarms, far more than the number of alarms triggered by other devices.

Xiaoli Tang, Xiaochen Yang, Jiajun Yuan, Jie Yang, Qian Jin, Hanting Zhang, Liebin Zhao, Weiwei Guo

J Med Internet Res 2024;26:e60944