Title: "A Proposed MultiNational TeleConsultation Program A U'S' Army
1"A Proposed Multi-National Tele-Consultation
Program - A U.S. Army NATO Cooperative
Endeavor"
COL Ron Poropatich, MD U.S. Army Surgeon General
Medical Informatics Consultant Deputy Director,
TATRC US Army Medical Research Materiel
Command Fort Detrick, MD
2Topics
- U. S. Army Tele-Consultation System for Deployed
Forces - USA/NATO TMED MOU in Afghanistan
- USA/Kosovo collaborations
- Conclusions
3Acknowledgements
- Chuck Lappan, Ret/USA - GPRMC
- David Lam, MD Ret/USA - TATRC
- Cynthia Barrigan, RN/MS - TATRC
- LTC Hon Pak - TATRC
- Dedicated Military Medical Personnel who support
the consult support service on a daily and
sustained basis
4Topics
- U. S. Army Tele-Consultation System for Deployed
Forces - USA/NATO TMED MOU in Afghanistan
- USA/Kosovo collaborations
- Conclusions
5Operational View OV-1
- Describe how the capability will be employed
6U.S. Army Teleconsultation program Background
- Email based system with JPEG image attachments
no patient identifying information no patient
privacy violations - Utilizes theater providers personal digital
camera routine Internet email access - U.S. based medical specialists answer
tele-consults 24x7 - Response time lt 5 hours (average for more than
3000 consults) - Strong favorable response from deployed providers
7Teleconsultation Program Business Practice
No
Consultant emails recommendation to the
deployed physician
Teleconsultation is routed to the appropriate spec
ialty group
Consultant retrieves and reviews teleconsultation
Copy furnished to specialty group confirms
teleconsultation is answered and enables
collaboration
8Locations Submitting Teleconsultations
Map as of 1 September 2007
http//www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/refer
ence_maps/pdf/time_zones.pdf
Afghanistan
Italy - Sicily
Okinawa
Ecuador
US Australian Navy afloat
Egypt MFO Sinai
Pakistan
Belize
Kenya
Bosnia
Honduras
Kuwait
Philippines
Chad
Germany
Kyrgyzstan
Qatar
Continental US)
Hurricane Katrina
Turkey
Morocco
Iraq
Nepal
United Arab Emirates
Djibouti
9Current U.S. Army Tele-Consultation Clinical
Specialties in OIF/OEF
Burns-Trauma Cardiology Dermatology
Infectious Diseases Internal Medicine
Nephrology Neurology Occupational
Medicine Ophthalmology Pediatrics Preventive
Medicine Rheumatology Toxicology Urology Ortho
pedics
10Summary
- Program Summary
- 15 specialties with contact groups
xxx.consult_at_us.army.mil - 3,018 teleconsultations (April 2004 to September
2007 42 months) - 58 known evacuations prevented
- 97 known evacuations facilitated following
consultants recommendation - 904 different referring health
- care professionals
- 418 teleconsultations on
- non - US patients
-
- Average Reply Time
11U.S. Army Tele-Consultation Program Summary for
Deployed Forces April 2004 to
September2007
62 Dermatology 10 Infectious Diseases 5
Ophthalmology
By Specialty
66 Iraq 11 Afghanistan 6 Kuwait
By Location
53 Army 11 Marine Corps 8 Air Force 9
Non-Combatant
By Patient Branch
N 3018 consults
12Impact on Evacuations - Summary
13Teleconsultation Measures Of Effectiveness
- Relevant to deployed medical support
- Improved access to specialty care (demonstrated
in all specialties) - Avoided or facilitated medical evacuations due to
second opinion consult - Elevation of the quality of care by allowing
rapid multi-specialty consultation (e.g.
Infectious Disease Dermatology) - Improved optimization of medical resources
(consult management in theatre)
14Topics
- U. S. Army Tele-Consultation System for Deployed
Forces - USA/NATO TMED MOU in Afghanistan
- USA/Kosovo collaborations
- Conclusions
15US Army Medical Command Offer to NATO Forces
- Aim As a proof of concept, USA is offering this
clinical capability at no charge to NATO/PfP
forces deployed in Afghanistan. - Objective A draft MOU/MOA Technical
Arrangement has been developed and staffed
nationally and within NATO. It is felt to be
legally satisfactory.
16Afghanistan
17Draft Memorandum of Agreement Between U.S. Army
Medical Command NATO
- Draft Agreement considers
- Legal Issues (e.g. Liability/NATO SOFA/PFP SOFA)
- Patient Privacy/Security
- Finances
- Technical Arrangements
- Metrics for Demonstrating Effectiveness
- Clinical Supervision in Theatre
- Quality Assurance
18Draft Memorandum of Agreement Between U.S. Army
Medical Command NATO
- NATO participation is voluntary
- The U.S. will not charge for this support
- U.S. Army offer is for an interim basis (6-12
months) and will assist NATO in establishing a
NATO tele-consultation system, if desired - NATO nations must provide computer/Internet
access and digital cameras (which are commonly
already in theater)
19Teleconsultation Metrics
- U.S. will maintain metrics on the NATO use of the
system, which will allow regular reports to NATO
on such items as -
- Data usage on a monthly basis
- Number type of medical specialties consulted
- Response time for each consult
- Audit reports
- Individual case use analysis
20U.S. Army Responsibilities
- Permit access to the Teleconsultation System by
NATO and PFP medical personnel deployed in
Afghanistan - Maintain a consultation management system which
ensures that all teleconsultations are routed to
an appropriate consultant, that a response is
given in a timely manner (lt 8 hours) , and
maintain appropriate metrics to document usage,
successes, and problems - Provide system description, instructions, and
guidance on use of the system to NATO Medical
Advisor, suitable for distribution to deployed
NATO and PfP medical personnel
21NATO Responsibilities
- NATO Medical Advisor will
- Insure use of this system is incorporated into
Operational Orders - Publish and distribute the instructions and
guidance provided by the U.S. Army to all
deployed clinical providers in Afghanistan - Insure that providers are trained in the use of
the system
22U.S. Army MEDCOM/NATO MOU Status
- NATO approved in June 2007 the U.S. Army
teleconsultation offer for NATO use in
Afghanistan. - US Army approval expected in September 2007
- NATO staffing to begin after US Army signature
completed - Deploy TMED system in FY08, Q2 to Afghanistan
(tentative) - Australia military in Afghanistan also interested
in using the U.S. Army system
23Topics
- U. S. Army Tele-Consultation System for Deployed
Forces - USA/NATO TMED MOU in Afghanistan
- USA/Kosovo collaborations
- Conclusions
24U. S. Army Telemedicine Support to Kosovo
Kosovo Telemedicine Center in Pristina
Camp Bondsteel, U.S. Army
25Kosova Telemedicine Center (KTC)
- Inaugurated - December 2002 as an integral part
of the University Clinical Center of Kosova
(UCCK) - Funded by the European Agency for Reconstruction
- 1.5 million grant - Phase 1 - U.S. Department of State (Bureau of Educational
and Cultural Affairs) provided (Oct. 2006) an
850,000 grant to the Kosovo Foundation for
Medical Development to further develop these
programs (KTC as the major project partner)
Phase 2 - KTC regularly provides on-line and VTC-based
educational programs not only in Kosova, but
throughout the Balkans, with recent effors in
Albania and Macedonia - KTC has an ongoing effort to further develop this
capability throughout Kosovo involving
development of 7 regional TMED centers - Phase 3
26MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDINGBETWEENCAMP
BONDSTEEL FORWARD DEPLOYED CONTINGENCY MEDICAL
TREATMENT FACILITY(Task Force Medical Falcon
XIII, KFOR 8US ARMY ORGANIZATION)ANDTELEMEDICIN
E ASSOCIATION OF KOSOVO(Kosovo Telemedicine
Center)PRISTINA, KOSOVO
27U.S. Army MEDCOM MOU with KTCStatus
- MOU written being staffed with U. S. Army
European Regional Medical Comand - KTC requesting U.S. Army to augment their
clinical needs via TMED - Follow on planning scheduled - Balkans
Telemedicine Conference in Tirana, Albania
October 21-23, 2007
28Topics
- U. S. Army Tele-Consultation System for Deployed
Forces - USA/NATO TMED MOU in Afghanistan
- USA/Kosovo collaborations
- Conclusions
29Conclusions
- U.S. Army Medical Command has a long-standing
history of supporting international TMED efforts - Low cost simple TMED solutions are effective
- Military medical humanitarian support with TMED
has demonstrated value - NATO Balkans TMED involvement with the U. S.
Army is increasing
30Back-up Slides
31NATO Telemedicine Capabilities
- Matrix developed assessing NATO TMED
capabilities (approved March 2007) - NATO nations invited to provide information
- 16 out of 26 nations responded
- Lithuania Belgium Romania
- Greece Finland France
- United Kingdom Netherlands Canada
- USA Italy Germany
- Czech Republic Spain Estonia
- Poland
32NATO Telemedicine CapabilitiesFindings
- A large percentage of the NATO Alliance nations
have considered that telemedicine is now a vital
part of the medical armamentarium, and have
either fielded or are planning to field
telemedicine capabilities to support their
deployed troops - A significant increase in fielded telemedicine
systems demonstrated over the past several years. - 5 nations felt that their national TMED
capabilities could potentially be made available
for NATO operations - 2 nations reported negatively
- 9 did not feel able to comment on behalf of their
nations
33NATO Telemedicine CapabilitiesFindings - 2
- Communications at role 1 are highly prevalent,
with both voice and internet access being
available in the majority of national systems.
This would imply that telemedicine systems which
are web-based can have a significant future
impact and availability, even down to Role 1
levels. - Analysis shows a significant penetration, current
and planned, of teleradiology, particularly at
roles 2 and above. - Most nations relying on Store and Forward
technologies, rather than VTC for patient care.
34NATO Telemedicine CapabilitiesFindings - 3
- Most nations do not have any formal structure for
their teleconsultation systems, nor any
brokered or centralized TMED consult system in
place (relying primarily on personal
relationships with consultants in the home
country to guide teleconsultation) - Specialized Telemedicine (e.g. telepsychiatry,
telemicrobiology, tele-medical maintenance,
teledentistry, etc.) are still used only in a
minority of reporting nations, but the technology
to extend their use is now available if it is
felt to fill a care gap - Electronic health records (EHR) are now in use or
planned in a minority of nations, and in a
still-smaller group are such records
interoperable with that nations civilian EHR
35NATO Telemedicine CapabilitiesRecommendations
- NATO COMEDS should recommend to the nations that
Telemedicine capabilities be positively
considered as a medical force extender and a
positive asset to the quality of patient care,
while assisting in reducing the size of the
medical deployed footprint - Planning for the use of Telemedicine capabilities
needs to be included in all doctrinal medical
planning documents - Nations to be encouraged to ensure that their
developmental and fielded telemedicine systems
are in compliance with the interoperability
requirements of STANAG 2517 - Availability of deployable telemedicine
capabilities be included in future versions of
the Defense Planning Questionnaire (DPQ) and
incorporated into the Force Goals/Force Planning
Process.