News | Patient Monitors | September 05, 2025

Philips Unveils Smart Telemetry Platform for Continuous Cardiac Monitoring

Empowering clinical teams to respond to surges, track usage and ease workflows with user-friendly touchscreen technology for telemetry patients on the move. 

Philips Unveils Smart Telemetry Platform for Continuous Cardiac Monitoring

Sept. 4, 2025 —  Royal Philips has introduced a new telemetry platform designed to help address critical challenges in healthcare — including staff shortages and alarm management. A key component of the solution is the next-generation Telemetry Monitor 5500 which offers a comprehensive, data-driven approach to operational performance and patient care for cardiac monitoring. 

Telemetry overuse can burden frontline teams, overwhelm hospital operations, and jeopardize patient safety.1 At the same time, care teams can face alarm and cognitive overload with an average of 350 alarms going off per patient per day.2 The telemetry platform streamlines alarm management, delivers data-driven insights, and automates clinical tasks with operational simplicity and networking options.  

“We continue to hear how disruptive non-actionable alarms and repetitive tasks can be. This platform will be a game-changer, offering a unified solution built to optimize telemetry across the care continuum,” said Ajay Parkhe, Business Leader, Hospital Patient Monitoring at Philips. “The combination of advanced clinical decision support tools, data-driven analytics, and secure monitoring empowers health systems to deliver better care while improving efficiency and reducing alarm burden.”  

By integrating with Philips central monitoring unit solution, also known as the CMU, the telemetry platform is designed to support:  

  • Simplified workflows with a redesigned compact, wearable monitor with easy-to-use touchscreen and lightweight design to keep patients ambulating while under continuous surveillance 
  • Scalable telemetry monitoring to expand the number of high-acuity beds based on demand, helping hospitals manage emergency department surges 
  • Monitoring technicians with tools that filter non-actionable alarms to help create a calm healing environment 
  • Data-driven decisions supported by retrospective monitoring insights that uncover trends in alarm activity, patient deterioration and telemetry utilization 

Connected bedside coordination enabled by mobile workflows that support “act anywhere” capabilities within the hospital network for admissions, transfers, wave strip capture, and team communication – all delivered through our Care Assist mobile application 

Philips also offers the technology for clinicians to monitor cardiac patients up to 30 days after discharge through Philips Mobile Cardiac Telemetry (MCOT)*. MCOT can be utilized to monitor a patient following an in-patient stay or ED evaluation to transition patients into an appropriate care pathway, maintaining a higher continuity of care for their patients.  

The Philips monitoring portfolio connects patient information across devices and systems with innovative support tools, early warning scoring, custom algorithms and unique data visualizations. The human-centric ecosystem is designed to dramatically transform care with predictive capabilities, workflow automation and situational awareness in a smart healing environment. Philips supports clinicians with innovative, sustainable solutions that help deliver better care to more people.  

[1] 1.AHA Telemetry Guidelines Improve Telemetry Utilization in the Inpatient Setting. AJMC. https://www.ajmc.com/view/aha-telemetry-guidelines-improve-telemetry-utilization-in-the-inpatient-setting 

[2] Jones K. Alarm Fatigue a top patient safety hazard. CMAJ. 2014;183(6):178. doi:10.1503/cmaj.109-4696

 

* Philips Mobile Cardiac Telemetry (MCOT) includes the MCOT device with SmartDetect algorithm. MCOT supports MCOT and Cardiac Event services, which include an end of service report, technician ECG review, and urgent/emergent notification of detected cardiac events when appropriate. The MCOT system is contraindicated for patients with potentially life-threatening arrhythmias requiring inpatient monitoring, and patients for whom the attending physician recommends should be hospitalized for ECG monitoring. However, it can be utilized by professionals for monitoring cardiac patients at home after discharge. 


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