french telemed 22 jan15 v2
TRANSCRIPT
Contact:
Website:
www.taurusglocal.com
CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY TO THE PARTIES IN DISCUSSION.
1
Background Notes
Indo-French Dialogue on Telemedicine in Healthcare
New Delhi, 22 January, 2015
WHAT IS TELEMEDICINE
Telemedicine is a Bundle of existing
technology and business applications:
Video: Video chat, F2F Webconference e.g.
Skype, High resolution Videoconference,
Sharing Endoscopy video film, USG
Image: DICOM format e.g. X-Ray, CT,
Patient’s pictures e.g. JPG/GIF format
Voice: VOIP Phone to Phone, Computer to
Phone, Computer to Computer
Text: Chat Sessions, Electronic Medical
Records, Messenger Apps e.g. WhatsApp
Business Applications: Primary Care,
Second Opinion, Remote Monitoring etc.
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WHY TELEMEDICINE
Promise of fulfilling gaps:
HR Crisis:
Shortage of Doctors,
Shortage of Nurses,
Shortage of Technicians,
Shortage of ANM, ASHA
Ability: Skill obsolescence of medical staff in
rural and remote areas
Access: Little Medical facilities in Rural and
Geographically Remote areas
Affordability:
80% of India’s population lives in villages,
2% of Indian population falls below the poverty
line every year due to medical expenses
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TELEMEDICINE CHALLENGES Business Issues:
Collection of payment from rural and remote areas
Cash based economy,
Very little penetration of Plastic money,
eMoney, eBanking not prevalent
HR:
Medical Staff not trained on IT,
Old School resistant to IT,
Senior Doctors reluctant to visit rural areas,
Younger Doctors not going to primary care
High touch Culture:
Indian culture looks for Tangibility
Touch, Feel, Smell play vital role
Doctors practice runs on personal relationships
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PROMISE OF TELEMEDICINE
Chain of Clinics:
Urban Main Hub: Having Specialist Doctors
Semi-Urban Local Hub: Having Primary Care
Physicians
Rural Spoke: Nurse, ANM, ASHA in rural and
remote areas
Staff from higher centers regularly visit lower
centers to handle Hi-Touch culture
Remote Monitoring:
Elderly Care, Home Care, Hospice,
Rehab,
Difficult Pregnancies,
Chronic Disease Management
eLearning
Bundle Telemedicine with eHealth and mHealth:
EMR for patient history and orders
Internet of Things: Integrate self monitoring
devices to mobiles for reporting on health status
Smart Mobile Apps acting as devices e.g.
Pedometer, ECG, Temperature, HR, BP monitors 5
TELEMEDICINE IN INDIA
Some Projects:
National Telemedicine Network
National Knowledge Network
Apollo Telemedicine Network
SGPGI Lucknow – Telemedicine CoE
PHC- District Telemedicine Pilot programs
Tripura Telemedicine Program
Issues:
Pockets of Success but not Scalable
Rural penetration issues
Internet penetration: 2G < 3G < 4G
Power Situation unpredictable
Rural Telephone Network issues
> 900 Million Mobile Phone users in India
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Contact:
Website:
www.taurusglocal.com
CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY TO THE PARTIES IN DISCUSSION.
7
GOVERNMENT OF INDIA POLICY ON
TELEMEDICINE
EHR Standards notified. Available on
MoHFW website.
MDDS Standards draft approved.
Available on MoHFW website
Telemedicine Guidelines published.
Digital India > eKranti > eHealth
Services > Telemedicine
DEITY > NeGP > MMP > Health
National eHealth Authority [NeHA] in the
works.
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V I S I O N S T A T E M E N T S I N H L E G A N D B A C K G R O U N D N O T E S
Overarching goal is a health
information network that links
all service providers in public
and private sector and also
generates the aggregate
figures for policy and
management decision
A system based on universal
registration and biometrics
which is dynamic health
record of every citizen,
portable and accessible to
service providers and
patients
Generates the alerts for disease
surveillance
I M M E D I A T E N E E D S A S I D E N T I F I E D I N W O R K I N G G R O U P P A P E R S
BRIDGING THE GAP
Need to Integrate
Births and Deaths
Service Delivery data
from HMIS
National Disease/ Program
Monitoring
Disease Surveillance
Epidemiology GIS
Nutrition Surveillance
Emergency Response Support
Public Information
HR and Financial
Management
Hospital Information
Systems, EMR, PHR
Medical Education
and Research
Regulatory Support
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LEAPING FORWARD FOR INDIA
State2 Health
Information
Exchange
State1 Health
Information
Exchange
State3 Health
Information
Exchange
1. Build the eHealth Authority
2. Setting Standards
3. Get the architecture right
4. Integration across systems
5. ICT for quality of care
6. Capacity Building
National
Health
Information
Network
Standardized
Technical
Architecture
Standardized
Interfaces
Standardized
Data Structures
Standardized
Vocabularies,
Code Sets
Standardized
Functional
Architecture
Disability
I/O Standards
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Physician/Hospital
Pharmacy
HIE Call Centre
Patient Ambulance
Lab/ Rad
Corp Employer Rep And Insurance
Health Information
Exchange for
Chronic Disease
Management
Convincing all the stake holders to share the data on a cloud is
the biggest challenge in building a health information exchange
11
Contact:
Website:
www.taurusglocal.com
CONFIDENTIAL AND PROPRIETARY TO THE PARTIES IN DISCUSSION.
12
DEFINITION OF TELEMEDICINE
Telemedicine is defined by the Telemedicine Information Exchange (1997) as the
"use of electronic signals to transfer medical data (photographs, x-ray
images, audio, patient records, videoconferences, etc.) from one site to
another via the Internet, Intranets, PCs, satellites, or videoconferencing
telephone equipment in order to improve access to health care."
Reid (1996) defines telemedicine as "the use of advanced telecommunications
technologies to exchange health information and provide health care services
across geographic, time, social, and cultural barriers."
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HISTORY OF TELEMEDICINE
The practice of medicine through telecommunications, or telemedicine, began in the early
1960s when the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) first put men in
space. Physiological measurements of the astronauts were telemetered from both the
spacecraft and the space suits during NASA space flights. These early efforts were
enhanced by the development of satellite technology which fo stered the development
of telemedicine.
NASA funded telemedicine research projects in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
In 1974, NASA conducted a study with SCI Systems of Houston to determine the minimal
television system requirements for accurate telediagnosis. A high-quality videotape was
made of an actual medical exam conducted by a nurse but supervised by a physician
watching on closed-circuit television. These videotapes were systematically
electronically degraded to less than broadcast quality. The original and degraded videos
were then shown to randomly selected groups of physicians who attempted to reach a
correct diagnosis (Telemedicine Research Center, 1997).
In 1989, NASA conducted the first international telemedicine project, Space Bridge to
Armenia/Ufa, after a powerful earthquake struck the Soviet Republic of Armenia in
December 1988. An offer of medical consultation was extended to the Soviet Union by
several medical centers in the United States. Telemedicine consultations were
conducted under the guidance of the US/USSR Joint Working Group on Space Biology
using video, audio, and facsimile between a medical center in Yerevan, Armenia and
four medical centers in the United States. 14