In a first of its kind initiative in the healthcare sector in India, Chennai-based Apollo Hospitals Group is soon going to launch the next version of telemedicine, a web-based platform with a 'Skype-like’ video conferencing tool embedded into it’.
Set to be launched in November this year, the platform will enable a user (read patient) to consult with the hospitals’ panel of doctors anytime and anywhere in the world over video conferencing. A user needs to log on to the portal, upload the clinical test reports and chose the doctor of his/her choice to seek advice.
“We are one of the pioneers on the telemedicine technology when we launched this way back in 2000. Now, we are now taking telemedicine to its next phase when we don’t need to set up physical telemedicine stations. It is a cloud-based system which will provide virtual doctors anytime who would consult the patients over video conferencing system embedded in it,” said Sangita Reddy, Executive Director of Apollo Hospitals Group.
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The DSS team will also advise the patients if they are required to consult a specialist or they are required to visit the hospitals in person. At the same time, since it is a web-based application, the specialist doctors can log on from anywhere, may it be from the hospital, from the outpatient department or even from their home using the password given to them.
“Basically 80% of the health problems can be handled very simply – fever, cough, ear is paining – should I go to office or should I visit a doctor. You log on in a minute, consult a doctor and he will tell you these parameters,” added Reddy.
In the next phase, Apollo Hospitals is planning to back telemedicine 2.0 with health monitoring devices which can be attached to the patient’s body and transmit the reports such as ECG, blood pressure, blood sugar on real time when the patient is an elderly person and requires constant medical attention at home.
The device attached with the patient’s body can constantly monitor the important parameters and connect to the portal directly enabling the doctors to monitor it round the clock and give feedback if the patient is required to be taken to the emergency or there is a need to change the medication.
“Imagine the value of it in rural India. If you put these devices in the hands of the Asha (Accredited social health activists) or rural health workers, and if you provide them second opinion from the best medical centres anywhere in the city, advance healthcare can reach them at time and costs which was hitherto you can’t think or dream of,” added Reddy.
Besides, Apollo Hospitals is also planning to launch electronic ICU (eICU) across India. This will be small nursing homes where the ICUs will be linked with the hospitals’ central monitoring station. Doctors sitting in a city hospital or some other nursing homes can monitor the eICU patients remotely.