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Telemedicine project to help treat wounded Navy personnel on

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Press Trust of India New Delhi
Last Updated : May 17 2015 | 10:28 AM IST
Treating severely wounded personnel on board Indian Navy ships will be easier now as specialists sitting far away can advise the best possible treatment through video-conferencing via India's military satellite 'Rukmini'.
The government has recently sanctioned a Rs 61.59-crore telemedicine project for the Navy.
"It would bring a revolutionary change in attending to severely injured patients in remote locations where a specialist is not available," a senior Navy official said.
Explaining the concept, he said while a doctor and a medical team is always on board when a ship sails out, specialists are available mainly on the bases.
"At present, if there is an accident and a person is severely injured, he is stabilised and taken by air to the command hospital or is transferred to a bigger ship if one is available.
"With telemedicine, a super specialists like a neurosurgeon can see the reports and other details on his computer and give step by step directions to the general doctor on board via video conferencing," the official said.

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The Navy at present has 133 ships, over 200 aircraft and 13 submarines. The force has a strength of 600 doctors, of which specialists would be around 300 and super-specialists around 100.
While doctors are on board the ships, the specialist and super-specialists are mostly based on land. The Navy currently has three medical facilities on land.
The main is INS Ashwini in Mumbai which has the status of a Command Hospital. The other two are INS Sanjivani in Kerala and INS Kalyani in Visakhapatnam.
"Telemedicine would be facilitated through Rukmini," Navy sources said.

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First Published: May 17 2015 | 10:28 AM IST

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