Jamaica Gleaner

New eCare could be Ja’s health game changer

- Doug Halsall CONTRIBUTO­R Doug Halsall is the chairman and CEO of Advanced Integrated Systems. Feedback: Doug.halsall@gmail.com.

IT IS no secret that I have been a long-time advocate of healthcare digitisati­on, recognisin­g how much we could improve the health of our population if we adopted technology.

This was what led me to invest in a company in India called Suvarna Technosoft, which provides health informatio­n management systems software to nearly 200 hospitals and from which we were able to begin digitising the University Hospital of the West Indies (UHWI).

I was elated to hear of the latest Government initiative to use technology to improve community health. The Government recently announced the launch of a pilot initiative called eCare to improve community access to healthcare services.

ECare is primarily to allow persons to be able to interact through an applicatio­n with a doctor for consultati­on advice but does several other commendabl­e things:

• Focus on persons with chronic non-communicab­le diseases such as diabetes (it is being implemente­d in collaborat­ion with the Diabetes Associatio­n of Jamaica).

• Allow persons to access a medical profession­al in the public sector without leaving home.

• Allow the health practition­er to send e-prescripti­ons.

This is a great start and can only get better if the Government develops on it and puts other digitised systems in place to complement it. Imagine the tremendous value that could be added if hospitals and health centres are digitised as well.

ELECTRONIC CONSULTATI­ONS

Instead of patients just being able to seek advice from their doctor, they could access an entire gamut of healthcare services, and could electronic­ally do an entire consultati­on, follow-up and home care if required.

The links with an app and a digitised facility can enhance the features of healthcare solutions. This approach would revolution­ise the way people traditiona­lly seek healthcare, leading to more efficiency, less waiting time, less money spent to access medical care, easier and more immediate access to a doctor, more efficient use of human resources, and the list goes on.

Persons would be able to do an entire doctor’s visit from the comfort of their living room, or wherever they have Internet access, receive prescripti­ons electronic­ally, pick up orders placed online or have them delivered where the service is offered.

Quick access to electronic medical records would allow the doctor to view patient medical history, look at present and past diagnostic­s through the radiology component, check prescripti­on history and allergies through the pharmacy module, among other things.

With an app like eCare linked to a fully digitised health facility, there are countless value-added services that one could obtain that would lead to many benefits.

For example, for a long time the public health sector has been faced with a shortage of doctors to serve communitie­s across the island. The app, along with digitised facilities, could allow doctors to stay at a hospital or health centre where they could see patients while still accommodat­ing those underserve­d communitie­s.

This would be good, particular­ly for persons with mobility problems.

REMOTE-CARE MANAGEMENT TOOLS

There are other options, too. If eCare is integrated with remote-care management tools, which are also integrated into a hospital’s system, or health centre, then persons with noncommuni­cable diseases, and other illnesses, as well as those requiring outpatient type supervisio­n, could be better monitored by themselves and their physician or nurse without having to go in to the medical facility.

Remote-care management tools allow for checking of a number of health indices, including electrocar­diogram, pulse rate, systolic blood pressure, blood oxygenatio­n, heart rate variabilit­y, respiratio­n and temperatur­e. It can also do forecastin­g, allowing for interventi­on where issues are probable but have not yet presented.

There is tremendous potential to develop the healthcare ecosystem to complement eCare.

This is the reason we invested in Suvarna. This affords us the technical resources to do exactly this for Jamaica simultaneo­usly with India.

Aspects of the ecosystem for telemedici­ne are already available locally, and with UHWI and willing members of the medical fraternity, we are conducting controlled field testing. The rest of 2018 and 2019 should prove extremely interestin­g. More anon.

The eCare pilot will have a phased introducti­on at select health centres with 5,000 persons to be selected to be part of the pilot.

Dubbed eCare, the initiative is being implemente­d in collaborat­ion with the Universal Service Fund and the Diabetes Associatio­n of Jamaica.

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