
Science Resources RSS Feeds
|
 |
 |
 |
Retinopathy of prematurity diagnosis time significantly reduced using telemedicine
June 30, 2009
To be properly diagnosed, retinopathy of prematurity (ROP), the leading cause of childhood blindness in the United States and worldwide, requires a time intensive process and significant coordination between ophthalmologist and NICU staff. A recent study examining ROP diagnosis speed using indirect ophthalmoscopy versus telemedicine, remote medical consultation, is featured in the July issue of the American Journal of Ophthalmology ( http://www.ajo.com), published by Elsevier. The study was designed to compare the ophthalmologist's speed of ROP diagnosis using telemedicine versus traditional bedside ophthalmoscopy. The findings reveal that: 1) ROP diagnosis by the ophthalmologist is significantly faster via telemedicine, and 2) there are significant time requirements by ophthalmologists associated with ROP diagnosis at the NICU bedside beyond ophthalmoscopy. In particular, additional time is taken for travel and communication with families and hospital staff.
To counteract these time requirements the implementation of telemedicine for ROP management has the ability to decrease the time commitment for examining ophthalmologists. Previous studies have shown that telemedical ROP diagnosis is highly accurate and reliable compared with ophthalmoscopy, and future work is required to address workflow questions in more detail.
According to senior author Michael F. Chiang, MD, "Telemedicine has potential to improve the delivery and accessibility of care for infants with ROP by reducing geographical and logistical barriers. This study shows that it may also improve the efficiency of care for ophthalmologists."
Given the increased number of at-risk infants in the United States and worldwide, improved use of ophthalmology resources may help to prevent cases of avoidable childhood blindness.
Elsevier
|
 |
Related Telemedicine Current Events and Telemedicine News Articles Telemedicine Current Events and Telemedicine News RSS Pre-hospital organization: The first links in the chain of survival for heart attack patients Mortality rate following a heart attack has fallen by more than 50% in Europe over the past 25 years. However, because only minor advances in the medical treatment of AMI are expected over the next decade, it is through organisational changes in the pre-hospital phase that mortality rate will continue this decline to below 5%.
Internet complicates doctor-patient relationships Patients who ask their doctor about information they have read on the Internet, or webs that better inform them of their diagnosis, are no longer a rarity.
Nationwide telemedicine networks are essential for successful health care reform The U.S. healthcare system is in critical need of basic change to enable more equitable, effective, efficient care. Experts in various fields of medicine, public health, and industry propose that telemedicine, or information technology enhanced healthcare, must be a core component of a viable healthcare reform strategy.
Telemedicine Expands Reach of Care for Parkinson's Patients A unique and innovative telemedicine project is providing distant nursing home patients with Parkinson's disease access to neurologists at the University of Rochester Medical Center (URMC).
Novel biomarkers in heart failure Several new biomarkers have been recently described in Heart Failure (HF) syndrome either in stable chronic patients as in the settings of acute decompensation.
Telemedicine may improve care for school children with diabetes Type 1 diabetes is the most common chronic childhood disease. The management of this serious medical condition includes regular fingerstick glucose measurements, multiple daily injections of insulin, and frequent insulin dose adjustments.
NASA's electronic nose may provide neurosurgeons with a new weapon against brain cancer An unlikely multidisciplinary scientific collaboration has discovered that an electronic nose developed for air quality monitoring on Space Shuttle Endeavour can also be used to detect odour differences in normal and cancerous brain cells.
Telehealth for diabetes promotes aging at home, not in the hospital A large study of ethnically and racially diverse individuals with diabetes has found that home telemonitoring of their health resulted in significantly fewer deaths than in a similar group that was not monitored. Diabetes is the sixth leading cause of death in the United States.
Telemedicine can dramatically improve child sexual assault examinations in rural areas The use of telemedicine can dramatically improve the quality of child sexual assault examinations in rural communities where rates of abuse and neglect are highest - sometimes more than double the statewide rate - a study published in the January issue of the medical journal Pediatrics has found.
The Next Step in Health Care: Telemedicine Imagine a scenario where doctors from different hospitals can collaborate on a surgery without having to actually be in the operating room. What if doctors in remote locations could receive immediate expert support from top specialists in hospitals around the world? More Telemedicine Current Events and Telemedicine News Articles
|
 |

|
E-Health, Telehealth, and Telemedicine: A Guide to Startup and Success (Jossey-Bass Health Series)
by Marlene M. Maheu (Author), Pamela Whitten (Author), Ace Allen (Author)
E-Health, Telehealth, and Telemedicine is a hands-on resource that shows how communication technologies can be designed, implemented, and managed to help health care professionals expand and transform their organizations. Step by step the authors reveal how to introduce innovative communication tools to a wide range of health care settings. This indispensable book contains a wealth of information, suggestions, and advice about program development, ethical, legal and regulatory issues, and and technical options.
|

|
History of Telemedicine: Evolution, Context, and Transformation
by Rashid L. Bashshur (Author), PhD (Author), Gary W. Shannon (Author)
The History of Telemedicine provides a comprehensive and in-depth analysis of the evolution of telemedicine from ancient Greece to the present time. It places the development of this field in the context of the never ending quest for providing equitable access to health care and re-casting the medical care landscape, while trying to assure quality and contain cost. The book describes the origin of modern telemedicine in experiments such as those by Willem Einthoven s 1905 long distance transfer of electrocardiograms through the pioneering era of teleradiology and telepsychiatry of the 1950s, its coming of age in the 1970s, its maturation in the 1990s, and finally the recent transformation and adoption by the mainstream. The authors delve into the rich history of telemedicine and tell the...
|

|
Mobile Telemedicine: A Computing and Networking Perspective
by Yang Xiao (Editor), Hui Chen (Editor)
Advances in the area of wireless and mobile telemedicine to diagnose and treat patients have drawn growing attention from healthcare providers and recipients, industry, researchers, and governments.This volumeexamines computing and network dilemmas which arise from wireless and mobile telemedicine. Comprised of the contributions of many prominent international researchers, the book gives an overview of patient care and monitoring, discusses the use of telemedicine in cardiology and diabetes, analyzes security and privacy considerations, examines issues relating to networking support, and concludes with a section on the opportunities and challenges that are faced by those involved in this exciting technology.
|

|
Surgical Robotics: Is R2D2 in your Future?
Surgical Robots are here now; they have their roots in Stanford based research and Silicon Valley development. How do they work? What can they do? In this talk, Thomas Krummel, MD, addresses the current uses of surgical robotics, the reasons for using them and their role in future medical treatments. Thomas Krummel, MD is the Emile Holman Professor and Chair Department of Surgery, Stanford University School of Medicine and Surgeon-In-Chief, Lucile Packard Children's Hospital.
|

|
LifeSource UA-281 Blood Pressure Monitor Cuff, Large (14.2" - 17.7")
by LifeSource
This durable nylon cuff is comfortable and easy to use and fits Large arm sizes 11.8" to 17.7". The cuff has a strong Velcro hook & loop fastener that is tested for up to 30,000 uses and is backed by a lifetime warranty.
|

|
AVTEQ TMP-600 AVTEQ Telemedicine Cart, Supports Up To One 42" Display.
AVTEQ AVTEQ Telemedicine Cart, Supports Up To One 42" Display.
|

|
Telemedicine: A Guide to Assessing Telecommunications for Health Care
by Committee on Evaluating Clinical Applications of Telemedicine (Author), Institute of Medicine (Author), Marilyn J. Field (Editor)
Telemedicine - the use of information and telecommunications technologies to provide and support health care when distance separates the participants - is receiving increasing attention not only in remote areas where health care access is troublesome but also in urban and suburban locations. Yet, the benefits and costs of this blend of medicine and digital technologies must be better demonstrated before today's cautious decisionmakers invest significant funds in its development. "Telemedicine" presents a framework for evaluating patient care applications of telemedicine. The book identifies managerial, technical, policy, legal, and human factors that must be taken into account in evaluating a telemedicine program. The committee reviews previous efforts to establish evaluation frameworks...
|

|
Essentials of Telemedicine and Telecare
by A. C. Norris (Author)
Rapid advancement of telecommunications and information technology has created the potential for high-quality expert healthcare to be delivered when and where it is needed. This text charts the development of the telemedicine industry, defines its current scope and reveals the potential of new methodologies. explains the main features of telemedicine and telecare reviews the technology needed for telemedicine describes how to develop, deliver and evaluate telemedicine services considers the associated ethical and legal issues includes an in-depth survey of the literature with over 300 references to research articles and hyperlinks to associated websites This text provides a good working knowledge of the subject matter. It will be indispensable for all students on courses related...
|

|
Introduction to Telemedicine
by Richard Wootton (Editor), John Craig (Editor), Victor Patterson (Editor)
Exploring all the major aspects of telemedicine, and explaining what telemedicine is and why it is growing in importance, this book gives an introduction to the rapidly developing field of telemedicine. Whatever your specialty, this book makes a contribution in helping you to assess how telemedicine can be applied to your own working practice.
|
|
|
Telemedicine takes doctors to day care.(News): An article from: Pediatric News
by Joyce Frieden (Author)
This digital document is an article from Pediatric News, published by Thomson Gale on October 1, 2005. The length of the article is 1181 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Citation Details Title: Telemedicine takes doctors to day care.(News) Author: Joyce Frieden Publication: Pediatric News (Magazine/Journal) Date: October 1, 2005 Publisher: Thomson Gale Volume: 39 Issue: 10 Page: 1(2)
Distributed by Thomson...
|
|