El and Bill
New member
Had an interesting discussion this am with a neurologist about telemedicine, and thought it might be worthwhile to share.
For some time now, a doctor we know in Las Vegas NV has been able to operate on soldiers in Iraq via telemedicine -- the doc in US manipulates the scalpel (with a device that looks like a video game, and with a clear tele-picture) -- the attending doc in Iraq does routine procedures (suturing, etc) and acts as a standby to the 'distant' doc who actually performs the 'tricky' part of the surgery. These links to the military are now operational in many hospitals in the US.
This morning's discussion centered around telemedicine for stroke patients in the US -- some hospitals in rural Colorado now have a telelink to the Stroke Center in Swedish Hospital, outside Denver -- the Denver doc can 'see' (via a very good t.v. monitor) the patient in the rural hospital, be told all the vitals, and decide whether to recommend the administration of the medication required within three hours of a stroke to help stabilize (and perhaps save the life) of the distant patient. This medicine carries a significant risk of bleeding in the brain, so shouldn't be given to every person who has had a stroke, and the Denver doc is more experienced in making this decision than most rural docs.
The discussion was predicated because I had a stroke two months ago. I did not require the special medication, and have since had a stent emplaced in a vertebral artery at the base of my brain -- and, because of our desire to continue our nomadic lifestyle (often to remote areas distant from Stroke Centers) we were considering setting up a telelink between our laptop (with a mounted t.v. type camera) and the Denver Center. However, he suggested, since he knows me and my condition so well we would (until the telelink improves to the point that it can be used by a linked individual, rather than a hospital as it is now), use telephone in an emergency from a distant medical location to him at the Stroke Center.
Maybe, we were speculating, there is a significant trend in medical practice that might someday bring the 'family doctor' back to house calls. Telemedicine, scanning your sniffling kid in his bedroom, might give the 'distant doc' all the info needed (like in a house call) to care for the kid. Thus perhaps reducing costs, giving personal attention via the link, relieving congestion (and potential infection) in waiting rooms -- and changing some of the medical world we know today.
For some time now, a doctor we know in Las Vegas NV has been able to operate on soldiers in Iraq via telemedicine -- the doc in US manipulates the scalpel (with a device that looks like a video game, and with a clear tele-picture) -- the attending doc in Iraq does routine procedures (suturing, etc) and acts as a standby to the 'distant' doc who actually performs the 'tricky' part of the surgery. These links to the military are now operational in many hospitals in the US.
This morning's discussion centered around telemedicine for stroke patients in the US -- some hospitals in rural Colorado now have a telelink to the Stroke Center in Swedish Hospital, outside Denver -- the Denver doc can 'see' (via a very good t.v. monitor) the patient in the rural hospital, be told all the vitals, and decide whether to recommend the administration of the medication required within three hours of a stroke to help stabilize (and perhaps save the life) of the distant patient. This medicine carries a significant risk of bleeding in the brain, so shouldn't be given to every person who has had a stroke, and the Denver doc is more experienced in making this decision than most rural docs.
The discussion was predicated because I had a stroke two months ago. I did not require the special medication, and have since had a stent emplaced in a vertebral artery at the base of my brain -- and, because of our desire to continue our nomadic lifestyle (often to remote areas distant from Stroke Centers) we were considering setting up a telelink between our laptop (with a mounted t.v. type camera) and the Denver Center. However, he suggested, since he knows me and my condition so well we would (until the telelink improves to the point that it can be used by a linked individual, rather than a hospital as it is now), use telephone in an emergency from a distant medical location to him at the Stroke Center.
Maybe, we were speculating, there is a significant trend in medical practice that might someday bring the 'family doctor' back to house calls. Telemedicine, scanning your sniffling kid in his bedroom, might give the 'distant doc' all the info needed (like in a house call) to care for the kid. Thus perhaps reducing costs, giving personal attention via the link, relieving congestion (and potential infection) in waiting rooms -- and changing some of the medical world we know today.