Nursing Informatics in Canada
Saturday, May 5, 2012
May 30, 2011 10:00 ET
Telehealth Use in Canada Grew by More Than 35 Per Cent Annually Over the Past 5 Years: National Study
Saved Patients Nearly 47 Million km in Travel Last Year
TORONTO, ONTARIO--(Marketwire - May 30, 2011) -
Editors Note: There is a photo and video associated with this press release.
With
more than 5,700 telehealth systems in at least 1,175 communities across
the country, Canada is a global leader in improving access to care by
connecting patients and care providers in different, and frequently
remote locations, according to a new
national study released today, announced Dr. Jennifer Zelmer, Senior Vice-President, Clinical Adoption and Innovation, Canada Health Infoway.
Canada Health Infoway (
Infoway) commissioned
the study, which was conducted by Praxia Information Intelligence and
Gartner, in order to gauge the current use and benefits achieved from
Telehealth investments made by the federally-funded organization,
provinces and territories, the federal government, and others.
"Across
the country, use of telehealth is growing rapidly, bridging the
distance between patients and their care providers," said Dr. Zelmer.
"Canadians do not have to travel as often to receive care, and the study
reports improvements in access to care, quality, and productivity
valued at millions of dollars last year."
Telehealth is used for a
wide range of clinical services, from mental health to cancer and
stroke care. It can include linking patients to health care providers
through live videoconferencing or having equipment in a patient's home
that transmits vital information such as blood pressure and respiratory
function to a patient's health team for frequent monitoring. Health
professionals also have the ability to transmit images of wounds or
other health images to specialists for assessment and advice.
Every
province and territory in Canada is using Telehealth today to bring
care closer to Canadians in their communities, and even within their
homes. The study, entitled
Telehealth Benefits and Adoption – Connecting People and Providers Across Canada, indicates
that almost 260,000 Telehealth sessions were held in 2010, supporting
services such as remote care, education for health providers and
administrative meetings. Nearly half of the clinical Telehealth sessions
delivered care to patients from rural and remote communities, which are
home to 21 per cent of Canadians. The report estimates that Canadians
who received care via telehealth rather than travelling to other
communities for care saved about $70 million in personal travel costs in
2010. In addition, there were benefits to the health system valued at
$55 million per year (e.g. because of avoided federal or provincial
subsidized travel costs or reduced hospitalizations for patients with
chronic diseases).
The report's findings are based on utilization data provided by the
Canadian Telehealth Forum
of COACH: Canada's Health Informatics Association, the organization
representing Canada's telehealth community. Also informing the findings
are more than 20 evaluations of telehealth projects from across Canada,
one-on-one interviews with telehealth experts, a review of more than 200
documents on the effectiveness of telehealth, and other data.
"Canada
is a global telehealth leader. We have the potential to further its use
until it becomes a standard tool for health professionals to deliver
care in remote, rural and urban settings," said Liz Loewen, Director,
Coordination of Care, Manitoba eHealth, who also serves as Chair/COACH
Board Member for the Canadian Telehealth Forum. "We are well on our way,
however, as noted in the report, critical success factors including
change management and adoption must be addressed in order to fully
realize Telehealth's potential."
Source: http://www.marketwire.com/press-release/telehealth-use-canada-grew-more-than-35-per-cent-annually-over-past-5-years-national-1520178.htm
Insight:
This article is about the effect of telehealth in Canada. TeleHealth technology allows
patients, nurses and doctors to talk as if they were in the same
room. During consultation, the doctor and patient can use TV or computer screen, a small camera, microphone
and special telephone line. It is very benificial for the client, community and doctors. Some of the patients benefits are: less time away from home and fewer travel-related expenses. For the community it improves health care quality, through the ability to access
specialists when they're needed. And for the doctor communication among health care providers
in remote areas. This system also reduces the expenses that are used for traveling. And even the people who are sick in remote areas, can be cured with the use of Telehealth. I hope that this system will continue to touch the lives of the people that needs medical attention.
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