Abstract

BackgroundOpportunistic screening for silent atrial fibrillation (AF) is recommended to reduce stroke, but screening rates are sub-optimal in general practice. We hypothesize that patient self-screening in the waiting room may improve screening and detection of AF.Methods and analysesThis proof-of-concept study tests a purpose-designed AF self-screening station and customised software which seamlessly integrates with general practice electronic medical records and workflow. The self-screening station records a lead-1 ECG. The software automatically (1) identifies eligible patients (aged ≥65 years, no AF diagnosis) from the practice appointment diary; (2) sends eligible patients an automated SMS reminder prior to their appointment; (3) creates individualised QR code to scan at self-screening station; and (4) imports the ECG and result directly into the patients’ electronic medical record. Between 5 and 8 general practices in New South Wales, Australia, will participate with an aim of 1500 patients undertaking self-screening. The main outcome measures will be the proportion of eligible patients that undertook self-screening, incidence of newly-diagnosed AF, and patient and staff experience of the self-screening process. De-identified data will be collected using a clinical audit tool, and qualitative interviews will determine patient and staff acceptability.Ethics and disseminationEthics approval was received from the University of Sydney Human Research Ethics Committee in June 2019 (Project no: 2019/382) and the University of Notre Dame Human Research Ethics Committee (Project no: 019145S) in October 2019. Results will be disseminated through various forums, including peer-reviewed publication and conference presentations.Trial registration numberACTRN12620000233921.

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