Posts Tagged ‘healthcare IT’

Information Technology for Society: Tele-Medicine in Operation Saturday, July 10th, 2010

The website next billion.net describes itself as a community of business leaders, social entrepreneurs, NGOs, policy makers, and academics who want to explore the connection between development and enterprise. An article dated July 8, 2010 reports on the use of mobile devices for healthcare delivery in remote locations.

The article titled “Hand-held Doctors and Mobile Premium Payments: How Technology Can Improve Insurance for the Poor” includes the story of one village woman who supplemented the meager income of her household by making and selling bread in her village. One day she felt unwell, and had a suspicion that she had contracted malaria. Meeting the nearest doctor would have meant a two-hour bus ride and loss of a day’s earnings just for the trip, at the same time spending money for the bus ride.

It so happened that the woman’s village had a CARE facility and she had been enrolled by her CARE-trained neighbor into a health insurance program. CARE Foundation trains Village Health Champions (VHCs) to provide healthcare at the village doorstep. VHCs are trained to ask the right questions, record basic medical symptoms and vital statistics, and identify emergency symptoms.

The VHCs are also provided with a hand-held terminal that has a built-in clinical decision support system. With the knowledge-base thus available, the VHCs can even provide medical advice and order prescriptions. In the above case, the VHC contacted a remote CARE doctor who recommended treatment through an SMS prescription, which was dispensed from the VHC’s medical kit.

Read the story in more detail at next billion blog.

Advancing Use of Healthcare Information Technology and Employment Sunday, February 14th, 2010

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius and Labor Secretary Hilda Solis announced on February 12 a total of nearly $1 billion in Recovery Act awards to help health care providers use health information technology (IT) and train workers for the health care jobs of the future.

The health department award of over $750 million is aimed at building capacity for widespread and meaninful use of IT in healthcare. It will assist healthcare providers to adopt and use electronic health records (EHR) in a meaningful way to improve the quality and efficiency of healthcare for Americans. The goal of the awards is to help over 100,000 hospitals and primary care physicians by 2014.

$386 million of the grant will help states to facilitate Health Information Exchange (HIE) and $375 million will go to non-profit organizations for developing regional extension centers (RECs) to aid health professionals implement and use health information technology.

The Department of Labor grant of over over $225 million will help train 15,000 people in healthcare, IT and other high-growth-potential job skills. Grant recipients have already identified roughly 10,000 job openings over the next two years in areas like nursing, pharmacy technology and information technology and the grants will fund training programs to equip people to tap such openings.

While training will be offered at local community colleges, employment services will be available through DOL’s career centers.

Read the full news release at: Recovery Act Announcement