Title: TELEMEDICINE: INDIAN PERSPECTIVE
1 TELE-MEDICINE INDIAN PERSPECTIVE DIT
INITIATIVES
ISRO-UNOOSA WORKSHOP 21 OCT 2008
2Telemedicine in India The Perspective
- India characterized by low penetration of
healthcare services - 90 of secondary tertiary healthcare facilities
in cities and towns away from rural India where
68 of population lives - Primary health care facilities for rural
population highly inadequate - Despite several initiatives by Government
private sector the rural and remote areas
continue to suffer from absence of quality
healthcare - Significant proportion of patients in remote
locations could be successfully managed locally
with advice/ guidance from specialists/
super-specialists in cities, without having to
travel to the specialists.
3Telemedicine The Promise
- Majority of diseases not requiring surgery
conducive to telemedicine - Can also play a significant role in training of
medical personnel across the country - Decrease in price and complexity of this
technology over last five years makes it
economically viable - Increasing availability of communication
infrastructure - Strong capability in terms of technical and
medical expertise - Key driver of publicprivate partnership for
health care delivery to the people of India - Major opportunity for cross border business for
India considering these strengths
4Telemedicine - Applications
Second Opinion Complex Interpretations
Telementored procedures/ Surgery - Robotics
Remote Consultation Critical Care Monitoring
Telemedicine
Home Care Ambulatory monitoring
Disease Surveillance Program tracking
Disease Management
Continuing Medical Education Public Awareness
Disaster Management
5Current Efforts
- Many programs worldwide using variety of
telemedicine technologies - In India telemedicine programs actively supported
by - Dept. of Information Technology
- Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO)
- Media Lab Asia
- NEC Telemedicine program for North-Eastern states
- Apollo Hospitals
- Asia Heart Foundation
- State governments
- Telemedicine technology also supported by some
other private organizations and Hospitals. - Major Communication infrastructure support by
ISRO BSNL - Ownership by Ministry of Health Family
Welfare-To Plan ahead by Setting up of National
Task Force
6DIT Initiatives
- As a Facilitator, with long term objective of
effective utilization/incorporation of IT in all
major sectors , DIT has taken following leads in
Telemedicine - Development of Technology-CDAC, IITs
- Initiation of pilot schemes
- Selected Specialty e.g. Oncology, Tropical
Diseases - General telemedicine system covering all
specialties - - Disaster management/Prevention
- Standardization
- Framework for building IT Infrastructure in health
7Development of Telemedicine Technology
DIT Initiatives
- Considerations
- - Cost effective
- - Compatible with available communication
infrastructure like - -VSAT, ISDN, Leased Lines, POTS etc.
- - Conformity to Standards
- -Interoperability with existing vendors
- - Benchmarking by clinical specialists
-
8Telemedicine in Kerala
DIT Initiatives Pilot Schemes
- Setting up of Telemedicine Telehealth Education
facilities - OncoNet Telemedicine system for Cancer Patients
in Kerala - More than 5000 patients treated/consulted at
these nodal centres - System upgraded with high bandwidth VSAT
connectivity - Major financial benefit to patients
- Major Roll out planned by MoHFW to cover 25 RCCs
100 outreach centres
Telemedicine System in West Bengal
- Telemedicine for Tropical Diseases
- Telemedicine projects to cover five referral
hospitals and nine District hospitals
Telemedicine Network for Himachal Pradesh (HP)
- 20 remote hospitals being connected with IGMC
Shimla to be further connected with PGIMER
9Telemedicine in North East States in India
- Need Remote area and lacks Specialty
Healthcare - Kohima Turnkey Project
- Implementation of Telemedicine Solution at Kohima
Hospital in Nagaland - Partnership between Govt. of Nagaland, Marubeni
India Ltd, Apollo and M C I T. System in
operation. - Two telemedicine centres connecting district
hospitals in Sikkim Mizoram with Apollo,New
Delhi operational - Telemedicine facilities in Tripura connecting
Referral Hospitals at Agartala with four
sub-divisional hospitals. - -Network inaugurated in June 2005
- -Enthusiastic response from remote
hospitals - -Network being expanded to cover six
more remote hospitals - - Major scheme is planned by N E C and ISRO to
cover all 75 districts in seven states through
Telemedicine
10Media Lab Asia Initiative for Rural eHealth
- Sehat Sathi Portable/ mobile model of
healthcare services and delivery- Provides
Tele-consultation and information on health and
disease through empowered rural health worker - CaSh A replicable model for IT based health
management information system using handheld
devices at grassroots. Plans for major
development pilot deployment to cover full
district - Pilot projects on mobile rural Telemedicine
11Other Current Initiatives
- Telemedicine Network in Tamil Nadu-Six remote
centres being connected with Specialty hospital
in Chennai - A Telemedicine Network System under
implementation at Cancer Institute (WIA), Adyar
and at seven peripheral centres in Tamil Nadu
Andhra Pradesh - Punjab Rural Telemedicine Network- More than 20
rural hospitals being linked with Referral
hospitals - Telehealth one of the major agenda for
incorporation in 100,000 Common Service Centres
(CSC) being set up as e-Governance delivery points
12Telemedicine Standardisation
- Need
- Large number of Telemedicine networks being
installed in the country - Lack of uniform, multipurpose telemedicine
standards meeting needs of diverse user groups at
different hierarchical levels hamper effective
use of telemedicine - Important for promoting International business
- Adherence/adoption to standards ensures
- Telemedicine Systems are interoperable
- Compatibility with new version of technology
- Scalability of systems without total replacement
while expanding capability - Recommended Guidelines and standards for
Telemedicine Technology Practice in India
evolved under a high level committee of DIT. - Document released and under wider circulation
with excellent response - Major attention and follow up by MoHFW National
Task Force for arriving at mandatory Standards
13DIT Initiatives
Framework for Information Technology
Infrastructure for Health (ITIH)
- Primary aim of building an Information Technology
Infrastructure for Health (ITIH) to efficiently
address all information needs of different
stakeholders (government, hospitals, insurance
companies, patients, vendors and others) in the
healthcare industry. - Addresses the key elements of Standards, Legal
Framework and Medical Informatics Education. - DIT has taken a major exercise in defining a
framework for ITIH in India with involvement of
a large number of concerned stake holders - Some Recommendations considered and accepted by
Insurance Regulatory Dev. Authoritys Working
Group - Base document for National Knowledge Commissions
WG India-Health Information Network Dev (I-HIND)
14Task Force for Telemedicine in India Current
activity
- Task Force has met and initiated action on the
terms of reference by setting up following five
Subgroups to cover major terms of reference - Sub group on Telemedicine Standards (covers EMR)
- Sub Group for formation of National Telemedicine
Grid. - Sub Group for evaluation framework for projects,
prepare pilot projects like National Medical
College Network, National Cancer Network - Sub Group for utilization of existing tele
linkages, training, CMEs in Telemedicine, human
resources medical informatics. - Sub Group for preparation of National Policy on
Telemedicine and tele medical education and to
prepare central scheme for 11th Five Year Plan - Some Sub Groups including at 1 have submitted
final Reports
15Vision Defining a National Telemedicine Network
- Vision for National Telemedicine Network to
cover large population. A three tier hierarchical
connectivity structure can be contemplated for
implementation in phases to include - A Primary Health Centre (PHC)/Community Health
Centre connected to District level hospital - A District level Hospital connected to a State
Level Hospital/ Selected Specialty Hospital - State Hospitals and selective District hospitals
being connected to a super specialty hospital at
the National level - Possibility of inclusion of hospitals/Health
centres in private sector - Issue being addressed by National Task Force
16Chandigarh
Ludhiana
Bhubaneshwar
Jamshedpur
Delhi
Ranchi
Bilaspur
Jaipur
Guwahati
Bhopal
Indore
Kanpur
Kolkatta
Lucknow
Siliguri
Goa
Kakinada
Vizag
Mumbai
Pune
Hyderabad
Vijayawada
Nagpur
Ahmedabad
Tirupathi
Bangalore
Nellore
Chennai
Baroda
Madurai
Erode
CBE
Anantapur
Mysore
Davengere
Thirunelvelli
Belgaum
Hampi
Ramanathapurar
Trichy
Chenganoor
Bhavnagar
Salem
17Chandigarh (State Hospital)
Delhi (Super Specialty Hospital)
Jaipur
Bhopal
Faridabad (District Hospital)
Lucknow
Kolkatta
Ayodhya (PHC)
18National Telemedicine Network Major
Challenges
- Resource requirement evaluation
- Connectivity/ Bandwidth (B/W) provision
reliability - Telemedicine cost consideration /affordability
- - Telemedicine platform-H/W,S/W,Video
Conferencing - - Basic Equipment (depending on
Centre-scanner,digital med. equipment - Adherence to open platforms and open architecture
standards - Sustainability
- Sourcing Specialist availability
- Trained manpower
- Crucial Role being now played by Ministry of
Health Family Welfare to Plan the National
Telemedicine Grid
19Thank you