Archive | Telehealth RSS feed for this section

Vocera are buying and hiring

I’ve mentioned Vocera a couple of times in the blog and they have some more interesting news this week.  Not only are they looking to hire people (which is great in this economy and IT industry in general) they are also looking to grow via acquisition.  The HealthcareIT website reports they have purchased two companies in the hospital worker space – Clinical Health Communications and Integrated Voice Solutions.

Full article here

“We see tremendous synergies between the OptiVox and VoiceCare hand-off applications and the Vocera communications solutions,” says Guille Cruze, CEO of Clinical Health Communications. “We are very excited to join a company that shares our vision for excellence and commitment to the highest levels of patient care.” 

Cruze will join Vocera’s executive team as vice president and general manager of hand-off communications. Prem and Janet Chopra, founders of Integrated Voice Solutions, developers of the VoiceCare product, will serve as strategic advisers to Vocera.

In a rare request for a CEO these days, Zollars asked Healthcare IT News for help in getting the word out about Vocera’s need for new employees. Having made more than 30 hires in the third quarter of FY10, he expects there will be 28 open positions in Q4. “We’re constantly looking for new talent to help us deliver for our customers.”

Popularity: 1% [?]

More Application Demo’s on Lync

Via the top blog of voipnorm here are a couple more examples of application integration possible with Lync.  The demo is provided by the Convergent UC guys.

Lync and Vocera:

Lync Application Example:

Popularity: 2% [?]

GE Smart Patient Rooms – Goes Live

GE are investing significant amounts of investment into Telemedicine, epecially focused around monitoring the patient and getting the data back quickly to clinicians.  GE’s Healthcare’s website doesn’t go into too much detail but I do know that internally GE Healthcare are large users of OCS so it would be interesting to know if there has been any cross development.

The recent HealthcareIT article can be found here

GE Healthcare’s Smart Patient Room pilot at Bassett Medical Center has been approved by the site’s Institutional Review Board to begin data collection. The technology, installed as part of GE’s healthymagination initiative, aims to help providers reduce patient safety risks and improve outcomes.

“GE is developing a unique solution for the healthcare industry that helps hospitals and staff identify and mitigate patient safety risks while offering meaningful solutions to improve patient outcomes,” said Jan De Witte, president and CEO of GE Healthcare Performance Solutions. “GE’s real-time, adaptable solution will provide actionable data to healthcare providers regarding patient safety and potential medical errors, which in turn will affect the necessary behavioral changes to avoid preventable errors.”

Popularity: 1% [?]

Anesthesia now via video conferencing

Found by @SteffWatson. The Hindustan Times highlights another example of how unified communications can facilitiate effecient ways of deploying healthcare to patients.  In this example a research team have explored ways to deliver Anesthesia to remote areas of Canada via video conferencing.

In a world first, doctors at McGill’s Department of Anesthesia treated patients undergoing thyroid gland surgery in Italy remotely via videoconferencing from Montreal on August 30 (10). Dr. Thomas Hemmerling and his team used the approach, which is part of new technological advancements, known as

”Teleanesthesia”. And the new approach involves a team of engineers, researchers and anesthesiologists who will ultimately apply the drugs intravenously which are then controlled remotely through an automated system.

The article can be found here.  This is very similar to the Cisco Telemedicine deployment in Russia mentioned last week.

Popularity: 1% [?]

UK Government scrap National IT Healthcare Scheme

The UK government today brought an end to the national IT healthcare scheme stating that IT decisions should be made at a local level.  The £12billion programme has received significant criticism since inception for increasing costs, limited functionality and poor delivery.  I have never worked directly in the programme so can not comment on these criticisms but I do have several questions.

Will there be a central set of standards published that all health providers must adhere to?  To give an example all health organisations will eventually deploy Instant Messaging and Presence.  Given that all the health organisations need to communicate will there be a central standard?  What happens if a surgery has Sametime, a hospital has Jabber and the trust has OCS?  Without central standards the IT provision within the system we be chaotic.

How will de-centralised costs be tracked?  While centralised costs by their very nature create large top line figures that can attract significant attention.  De-centralised costs are extremely difficult to track and monitor, how will we know that the health organisations are procuring effectively?

Again no idea if this is the right thing for the UK government to do, I just hope they understand the ramifications of their decisions.  Strong central standards and close understanding of costs are required and it can prove very difficult to implement with many different autonomous organisations making decisions on IT infrastructure that ultimately have to work together to make the system work for patients and tax payers.

I do have one customer service question.  Technology is clearly going to play a significant role in the provision of services to patients in the future.  How within a system that is specifically and intentionally designed to provide a standard level of service to all patients can the UK government ensure a consistent level of service across the nation.  What happens if the North West implement IT 200% more effectively than the South West?   Will citizens from the South West have to travel 500 miles to the North West to receive more effective care?

Popularity: 1% [?]

Cisco implement Telemedicine in Russia

Cisco have always been at the forefront of implementing UC solutions for Telemedicine. Yesterday Cisco released another use case based on their Tandberg platform which allowed a remote monastery to receive vital medical assistance from experts over 130 miles away based in St Petersburg.

The Tandberg solution, now provided by the Cisco TelePresence Technology Group, connects the remote monastery with mainland hospitals so that local practitioners can rely on the experience of Russian and international experts, delivered via high-quality video. Valaam Monastery is located on Valaam Island in Russian Karelia, the largest island in Lake Ladoga, 22 kilometers (13.7 miles) from the mainland and 220 kilometers (137 miles) from St. Petersburg.

The Island of Valaam receives more than 110,000 visitors every year, and the new center is already providing teleconsultations for pilgrims and tourists as well as monks and other local patients. In the first two weeks of its operation, 20 sessions were organized in the outpatient medical room, including consultations with specialists in St. Petersburg and Moscow hospitals. In addition, the center carried out a multipoint three-party consultation with the G.I. Turner Orthopedic R&D Institute in St. Petersburg and the A.N. Burdenko Neurosurgery Institute of the Russian Medical Academy. During that session, the professors attended a 9-year-old disabled girl trying to regain her ability to walk.

Take a look at the press release here

Popularity: 1% [?]

So long Stethoscope, hello iPhone

So when Steve Jobs and his Apple team were coming up with iphone I bet no-one put “iPhone will replace stethoscope and a developer will make money developing an app”.  This just goes to show the futility of modern IT business cases but more importantly it highlights how a communication tool (iPhone) that is relatively open (i know Steve still has to say yes) to development can help revolutionise an industry.

I’ve said/written this many times but we are only starting to scratch the surface that Unified Communication can provide.

The stethoscope – medical icon, lifesaver and doctor’s best friend – is disappearing from hospitals across the world as physicians increasingly use their smartphones to monitor patients’ heartbeats.

More than 3 million doctors have downloaded a 59p application – invented by Peter Bentley, a researcher from University College London – which turns an Apple iPhone into a stethoscope.

Last week, Bentley introduced a free version of the app, which is being downloaded by more than 500 users a day. Experts say the software, a major advance in medical technology, has saved lives and enabled doctors in remote areas to access specialist expertise.

“Everybody is very excited about the potential of the adoption of mobile phone technology into the medical workplace, and rightly so,” said Bentley, who initially developed the app “as a fun toy”.

“Smartphones are incredibly powerful devices packed full of sensors, cameras, high-quality microphones with amazing displays,” he said. “They are capable of saving lives, saving money and improving healthcare in a dramatic fashion – and we carry these massively powerful computers in our pockets.”

Read the iStethoscope article in the Guardian here the article describes other Telemedicince technologies too.

Popularity: 1% [?]

TeleHealth Solutions chosen by UK Government

The purchasing arm of the UK government recently awarded a teleheath framework agreement to TeleHealth Solutions who are a UK company supplying technology and consulting to the Health sector who require telehealth services.

Take a look at TeleHealth Solutions here

Popularity: 1% [?]

Telemedicine and Unified Communications

Unified Communications – especially presence, skill search, interactive real time applications and video – can and will revolutionise health care. It’s great to see that everyday their are articles related to the investment in Telemedicine across the world.

UC can reduce the cost of providing health care and provide faster and wider access to specialist skills. Given the amount of examples I’ll be keeping a running score of articles I come across.

From FireceTelecom California has recently launched a Telemedicine network:

California residents will now be able to tap into new health care capabilities as the state officially launched its California Telehealth Network (CTN) this week.

The CTN, which was announced by Arnold Schwarzenegger, California’s governor, and U.S. Chief Technology Officer Aneesh Chopra at the UC Davis Cancer Center in Sacramento, will connect more than 800 California healthcare facilities to a statewide medical-grade network of healthcare and emergency services.

And the growing nations of India, Brazil, Russia and China are also investing, from Heatlhcareitnews:

DALLAS – A new research report from MarketsandMarkets (M&M), a U.S.-based global market research and consulting firm, shows that the telemedicine market in Brazil, Russia, India and China can be expected grow to nearly half a billion dollars in the coming years.

The study, “Telemedicine Market in Brazil, Russia, India, China (BRIC) – Advanced Technologies, Global Forecast,” shows that the telemedicine sector in those fast-emerging economies is expected to reach a market size of $418.4 million by the year 2014, at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 15.8 percent from 2009 to 2014.

Popularity: 1% [?]