Title: Telemedicine and e-health
1Telemedicine and e-health
- Dr Jim BriggsUniversity of Portsmouth
- jim.briggs_at_port.ac.uk
2Contents
- Definitions
- Types of telemedicine
- Case studies
- E-health
- Other issues
- Further information
3Definitions
4Raw definitions
- Telemedicine
- medicine at a distance
- cf television
- E-health
- health services delivered electronically
- E-commerce
5No standard definition
- "To define telemedicine is to have something in
common with Humpty Dumpty that is, by making a
word to mean whatever you want it to mean."
BJHCIM - Google search throws up 13 defns
- http//www.google.com/search?qdefineTelemedicin
e
6US government
- "The use of medical information exchanged from
one site to another using electronic
communications for the health and education of
patients or providers and to improve patient
care." - http//cms.hhs.gov/glossary/default.asp (Dept of
Health and Human Services)
7ATA one(s)
- "the use of medical information exchanged from
one site to another via electronic communications
for the health and education of the patient or
health care provider and for the purpose of
improving and extending the availability of
patient care" - http//www2.umdnj.edu/omcweb/1998/telemedicine.htm
- "access to medical care for consumers and health
professionals via telecommunications technology" - http//www.atmeda.org/about/aboutata.htm
- e-health is the "use of the Internet for
healthcare"
8JMIR
- "e-health is an emerging field in the
intersection of medical informatics, public
health and business, referring to health services
and information delivered or enhanced through the
Internet and related technologies"
9e-health 2002 conference
- e-health is "the leveraging of the information
and communication technology (ICT) to connect
provider and patients and governments to educate
and inform health care professionals, managers
and consumers to stimulate innovation in care
delivery and health system management and, to
improve our health care system"
10TEIS one
- Starting point
- "The use of Information and Communication
Technology (ICT) to deliver healthcare at a
distance"
11TEIS scope
- Telemedicine and e-health are terms that are
applied to the use of Information and
Communication Technologies (ICT) in medicine,
health and social care delivery - As such, the subject divides into two main areas
- improvements to existing services in terms of
their efficiency and effectiveness - for example,
pathology, radiology, education and training, and
Electronic Patient - new service delivery development - for example,
teledermatology, teleophthalmology.
12TEIS scope
- For our purposes, we define our area of interest
as those applications that - use information and communication technology
- to deliver health and/or social care in new
ways - on a person to person basis
- where those people are physically apart
13Types of telemedicine
- CJ Fitch, JS Briggs, RA Beresford, "System issues
for telemedicine systems", Health Informatics
Journal, vol. 7, no. 3/4, September/December
2001, pp222-230
14Characteristics of tm systems
- Interaction style
- Data types
- Equipment
- Action
- Patient numbers
- Duration
15Interaction style
- Real-time (synchronous)
- Participants all active at the same time
- Use any synchronous technology (e.g. phone)
- Most commonly video conferencing
- Less often but becoming more common vital signs
monitoring - May need high bandwidth
- Store-and-forward (asynchronous)
- Participants do not need to be active at the same
time - Use any structured form of message passing
- Most commonly email
- Less often but becoming more common systems
exchanging messages - May not need high bandwidth
16Data types
- Text
- Patient notes
- Diagnosis
- Image
- X-rays
- Pathology slides
- CT/MRI/ scans
- Audio/video signals
17Equipment
- General purpose
- Off the shelf PCs
- Specialist
- Electronic stethoscopes
- Image capture equipment
- Image display equipment (possibly)
18Action
- Intervention
- Direct influence on patient treatment
- Advice
- Indirect influence
- Final decision made by intermediate party
19Patient numbers
- Multiple patients
- e.g. where a number of patient cases are
considered at the same time
20Duration
- Timespan over which communication sessions take
place - single interaction
- single episode of care (multiple interactions
over same problem) - long-term (multiple episodes)
21Categories of telemedicine
22Case study MIU
- Minor Injury Units
- replacing "unviable" accident emergency
departments - nurse led
- deal with "straight-forward" problems
- Linked to central AE department by video link to
provide expert backup - Examples
- Cornwall
- Portsmouth/Gosport
23Cornwall MIUs
24Gosport MIU
25Case study - ambulance links
- ECG, etc. links from ambulance to hospital
- Expert backup for paramedics
- Reducing "call to needle" time for rural heart
attack patients - Dundee study reduced average time from 125 to 52
minutes Pedley et al BMJ 2003 - Also, advance warning to AE staff of details of
incoming cases
26Dundee trial
27Case study - MDTs
- Multi-disciplinary teams (e.g. in cancer care)
need to discuss patient cases - Travel costs (i.e. time) prohibitive
- Video-conference links allow staff to meet at
more frequent intervals
28East Midlands cancer network
29Case study - teledermatology
- Overload on specialist dermatologists - long
waiting lists for referrals - tds provides commercial service
- specially trained nurses take digital photos
- specialist software routes to consultant
dermatologists (anywhere in UK) for diagnosis - consultant can work from home
- tds replaces local consultant but not totally
30tds sites
- North Manchester
- reduced waiting list from 18 months to 17 days in
6 weeks - Medway
- dealt with backlog of 3000 patients in 15 weeks
- Expanding into Essex, Hertfordshire and Texas
- http//www.tds-telemed.com/
31Case study - WorldCare
- Consortium of 4 big American hospitals
- Provide "second opinion" service worldwide (20
countries) - tele-radiology
- tele-pathology
- patient management consultation
- Local physician remains responsible
- http//www.worldcare.com/
32Case study - NHS Direct
- Biggest telemedicine project in the world
- Mainly telephone service
- Expanding to
- web
- online diagnosis for common conditions
- health encyclopaedia
- my NHS healthspace (personal info portal) news,
reminders, knowledge - digital TV
- http//www.nhsdirect.nhs.uk/
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35e-health
36The banking metaphor
- Most transactions carried out by the customer
- Centralisation of specialist services
- Decentralisation of non-specialist services
- including at home
- Services become "commodities"
- Is there a need for specialist equipment?
37Integration of ITinto Business Sectors
Manufacturing
Business Services
Public Services
(Banks)
(Health)
Integration of IT
1980
1990
2000
Jean-Claude Healy May 2000
IT as a gadget Trojan horse networks, Full
Integration of IT into Business (Organisational,
Legal) Re-engineering of the system
38Are hospitals a thing of the past?
39e-health blueprint - Malaysia
- Four Flagship Applications
- Tele-Consultation
- Tele-Continuing Medical Education for Health
Professionals - Mass Customised Personalised Information and
Education - Lifetime Health Plan
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41e-health - Pusan, S Korea
- Medical Tourism
- 2 hours by air for 2 billion people
- 1 with disposable income 20 million
- Cardiac - Cancer - Mental Health
- Costs can be competitive
- Popular tourist resort for families
42Other issues
- Ethics
- Economics
- Success factors
43Medico-legal/ethical issues
- Who is (legally) responsible for the patient's
treatment? - What country's laws apply?
- Where is the clinician licensed to practice?
- Can a correct diagnosis be made by telemedicine?
- Stanberry B. The Legal and Ethical Aspects of
Telemedicine. Royal Society of Medicine Books,
1998.
44Economics of telemedicine
- Infrastructure (network) costs
- getting cheaper
- Equipment costs
- getting smaller and cheaper
- People costs
- access to expertise
- travel by healthcare professionals
- building costs
45Economics 2
- What else to include?
- Patient costs
- is this the reason business cases fail?
- Social costs
- cost to society of being ill
- environmental cost of travel
46What makes tm a success?
- Why has telemedicine caught on in some
disciplines and some places, but not in others? - high-level support
- fortune right-time, right-place
- mature technology
- evangelists
- Do implementers of tele-X learn from
- the X literature?
- the telemedicine literature?
47Further information
48TEIS
- UK Telemedicine and E-health Information Service
- http//www.teis.port.ac.uk
- http//www.teis.nhs.uk
- Over 2000 records covering
- telemedicine/e-health activities (gt220)
- organisations
- people
- publications
- equipment
49TIE
- Telemedicine Information Exchange (US)
- http//tie.telemed.org/
- Covers
- Extensive bibliography (gt14,000 entries)
- Projects
- Events calendar
- Funding sources
- News
50CEW
- Confederation of e-health websites (Q)
- http//www.teis.port.ac.uk/orgs/cew/
- Other organisations include
- UK E-health Association
- Royal Society of Medicine
- IHM/ASSIST
- Norwegian Centre for Telemedicine
- EHTEL
51Journals
- Telemedicine
- Journal of Telemedicine and Telecare
- IEEE Transactions on Information Technology in
Biomedicine - Telemedicine Journal and e-Health
- Telehealth Practice Report
- Health informatics more generally
- Medical Informatics and the Internet in Medicine
- Health Informatics Journal
- Journal of Medical Internet Research
52The end
- jim.briggs_at_port.ac.uk
- Healthcare Computing Group,University of
Portsmouth - http//www.disco.port.ac.uk/hcc/
- http//www.teis.port.ac.uk/