Title: Medical Disaster Resources Network MD.RN
1Medical Disaster Resources Network (MD.RN)
- 2008 ATALACC Meeting
- Panama City, Panama
2Medical Missions for ChildrenMission Statement
- Provides medical diagnoses and treatment via
telemedicine to children and mothers - Facilitates medical knowledge transfer from its
source to healthcare providers worldwide - Delivers health related resources to underserved
hospitals - Supports applied medical research utilizing
communications infrastructure
3MMC Facts
- Founded in 1999 at St. Josephs Childrens
Hospital, MMC is a not-for-profit charity
supported entirely by grant and donations - MMC net worth in excess of 10 M (donated
services, equipment, satellite time) - gt30,000 children helped
4MMC History
- Founded by Frank and Peg Brady
- First Milestone Hospital del Nino in Panama
City, Panama
5First Child Helped
- Yordano, 11 years old with cranial deformity
resulting in mild retardation, only one eye, and
difficulty swallowing - Poster child for handicapped children for Panama
- Family of six with a healthy twin brother
- Using telemedicine to collect measurements, a
computer model was reproduced. His skull was
reshaped with computer imaging to correct the
problems. Implants of titanium and harvested
bone were created. - First surgery took place (in this case) back at
St. Josephs, the 10 hour phase one operation to
change the shape of Yordanos skull and create an
eye socket for prosthetic eye. - In conclusion, MMCs Telemedicine and Teaching
network was used to review the entire procedure
with approximately 50 physicians in Panama as a
forum for learning.
Yordano and Dr. Ephros
6Early Timeline
- 1999
- MMC founded by Frank and Peg Brady
- 2000
- United Nations (UNOPS) agrees to support MMC
effort - Pilot program established with Hospital del Nino
in Panama City - 2001
- World Bank and USAID partner
- MMC wins Polycom contest for best use of
videoconferencing - 2002
- Certificate of recognition from US Congress
- DOD agreement with MMC to provide telemed in
eastern Europe - Wins 14th Annual Federal Award
- 2003
- Intelsat, Ltd partnership formed
- US AID Grant
- 22 mentoring hospitals
- 2004
- St. Joes provides MMC headquarters, satellite
teleport, studio digital NOC - Internet2
7Giggles Childrens Theater
- Live performances 3 days a week
- Puppet shows, celebrity performers, magicians
- Transports patients to places such as Panama Rain
Forest, Bronx Zoo, NASA or diving with sharks - Archived Performances broadcast daily
8Media Production
9Telemedicine Outreach Program
- Two-way interactive video via IP
- TOP sessions are recorded and broadcast on MBC
- Consultations scheduled via MMC Help Desk
- 24 Mentoring Hospitals
10Medical Broadcasting Channel (MBC)
- US FCC license as a global satellite broadcaster
- Multi-cast streaming via Internet2
- Satellite time donated by Intelsat, Ltd.
- 9 M physicians, 14 M nurses, 89K hospitals, 16 K
major universities, plus 110K institutions (I2)
globally
11MBC Schedule
12MBC Content by Category
Physician Education 23
Medical Science 13
Prevention and Public Health 22
Family Health 14
Nursing Education 19
Patient Education 9
13Global Video Library of Medicine
- Electronically stores processed digital content
to feed MBC - Content supplied by highly credentialed tier-one
hospitals, federal agencies, research centers,
global organizations
14GVLM Content Partners (125)
- Alabama Dept of Public Health
- Montefiore Medical Center
- American Cancer Society
- California Distance Learning and Health Network
- Capital Media Group
- Childrens Heartlink
- Childrens Hospital Boston
- Operation Smile
- Center for Disease Control
- Childrens Hospital of Wisconsin
- Childrens Hospital of Omaha
- Deaconess Clinic
- Food and Drug Administration
- Howard Hughes Medical Institute
- Johns Hopkins Medical Center
- Kaiser Family Foundation
- Lifestar
Massachusetts Medical Society Miami Hand Center,
Badia Clinic National Library of
Medicine National Institutes of Health Partners
Healthcare SLP 3D, OR Live Southern Nevada Health
Network St. Josephs Regional Medical Center St.
Jude Cure4Kids St. Petersburg College St. Vincent
Healthcare Sutter Health System University of
Albany, School of Public Health University of
Maryland Medical Center World Health
Congress World Health Organization
15Global Video Library of Medicine
- GVLM is positioned to become the single largest
repository of medical education video in the
world
16MD.RN
- Medical Resources Disaster Network
- Up to date inventory of telemedicine hub networks
used to provide care coordination and services in
response to large scale disasters - Long term goal develop telemedicine response
that can increase long term surge capacity
17What We Know
- No nationally coordinated telemedicine network in
place to respond to large-scale disasters - With the very real threat of biological outbreaks
or terrorist attacks, there is a need for a
coordinated national response network - Existing telemedicine infrastructure is well
positioned to provide essential links between
local, regional and national resources in a mass
disaster - Utilization of telemedicine resources requires
access to a documented network of willing
telemedicine providers
18Infectious Disease ScenarioWhat Can 80 Sick
People On A Plane Cause
- If an infectious agent such as smallpox they can
reach 64,079 people in 9 days. - Of which 4673 will be hospitalized within 15 days
not counting the 5766 worried well that will show
up at the hospital - Requiring on a bad day- 8,000,000 gloves,
3,000,000 HEPA masks and 16,000 extra doctors and
nurses. - Source CDC
19Infectious Disease Scenario Or if the 80 Simply
Touch 800
- Assuming a pneumonic plague and early
containment, providers will still need 20,000
sets of gloves, 9,000 HEPA masks (per day), 67
nurses, 49 doctors and 1298 volunteers (without
Telemedicine)?
20Driving Factors
- Improved Containment Measures
- Resource Coordination
- Biological, Radiological, Pandemic Disasters
- Just in time training, education, treatment
protocols - Access to highly specialized clinical expertise
- Cant always move the patient to the doc or the
doc to the patient
21Questions to Think About
- When is the movement of information more
valuable than the movement of people? - What role can telehealth play in disaster
response? - How do we integrate telehealth into existing
disaster plans?
22Existing Telemedicine Database
- 200 Networks identified
- 3000 Telemedicine sites
- Not filtered for disaster preparedness
- Not tested for connectivity
- Currently includes
- Hub Networks
- Medical Call centers
- Home Telehealth
- Remote Monitoring
- Outsourced Clinical Services
23ATA EPR SIG TDRN Goals
- Define essential fields for the Database
- Create the inventory/direct and determine
collection methodology - Create specialized collaborative web based tools
to share information and promote dialogue on
emerging health threats and infectious disease
outbreaks - Identify target users (medical, EMS, federal, and
state agencies, public health, NGOs, military
and private sector entities)? - Develop dialogue and opportunities to educate
target users - Create appropriate use policieswho gets what
data - Define activation protocolsdo exercises, add
technical details to database - Qualify technical and clinical capabilities of
disaster TM sites
24TDRN Volunteer Coordinators
25TDRN Participation Form
- Network or Program Name
- of Sites
- Program URL
- 24/7 Point of Contact
- Title, Organization, Address, City,
- State, Zip, Phone, Cell, Pager, Email
-
- Clinical Resources (Yes or No)
- Infectious Disease Tropical Medicine
- Pulmonary Medicine
- Nuclear Medicine
- Pediatric Burn
- Notes
- Alternative POC
- Specialized resources
26New TDRN Telemedicine Database
- 55 disaster networks identified
- 5 Time Zones
- 1700 TM sites ready to respond
- Infectious Disease (21)?
- Pulmonary (23)?
- Nuclear (17)?
- Peds Burn (18)?
27(No Transcript)
28Next Steps for MD.RN Work
- Qualify technical and clinical capabilities of
MD.RN listings - Test and exercise the MD.RN sites to refine
activation protocols - Identify sites that are most useful for specific
disaster situations - Make information on volunteer network providers
useful and available to federal, state, and local
response agencies, while respecting permissions
for such use - Integrate telemedicine networks into local and
state emergency communications systems - Use MD.RN to complement and build upon other
existing efforts related to public health,
emergency response and threat detection, such as
CDCs Health Alert Network and Emergency Medical
Operation Centers (EMOCs)? - Dialogue with FEMA regarding reimbursement for
network costs in disasters - Dialogue with ASPR regarding a virtual DMAT type
team or an NDMS adjunct resource - Dialogue with state Medicaid programs about
reimbursement in disasters - Seek funding to support these activities
29Acknowledgements
- American Telemedicine Association (ATA) and the
Emergency Preparedness Response Special
Interest Group (EPR SIG - Volunteer Coordinators
- Participating Programs
- Medical Mission for Children
- 24/7 POCs
30For additional MD.RN information
Lori Balch lbalch_at_mmissions.org 252.917.1520
David Balch, EPR SIG Chair dbalch_at_mmissions.org 25
2.917.4412
31Thank you.
Restoring Hope through Technology