Jamaica Gleaner

COVID drives patients to log on to online doctors

- Judana Murphy/Gleaner Writer judana.murphy@gleanerjm.com

WITH SOCIAL distancing becoming the new normal in the wake of 12 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Jamaica, more people have been seeking medical attention through telemedici­ne.

Telemedici­ne is the remote delivery of healthcare services such as health assessment­s or consultati­ons over the phone or online.

CEO of MDLink, Dr Che Bowen, said there has been an uptick in both doctors and patients registerin­g on the platform.

“Over the weekend, I added 30 doctors, and we are seeing about 100 patients registerin­g per day,” Bowen told The Gleaner yesterday.

Before the onset of COVID-19, about 10 to 15 patients would register daily.

US President Donald Trump has boosted telehealth services in the fight against the coronaviru­s. The federal rule that has been waived allows for doctors to practise in states other than where they are licensed.

Bowen explained that the doctors are spread out across Jamaica’s 14 parishes, with Kingston and St Andrew having the highest number of doctors using the platform.

“It is a need at this point in time to control the virus and avoid the spread of the virus. Patients need to be staying home as the Government has said and doctors need to be staying home as well,” Bowen said.

The CEO explained that charges remain low, as it costs just under $2,000 to see a general practition­er and upwards of $3,000 for consultati­ons with specialist­s.

Payment must be made online.

Consultati­ons are done with the doctor of choice and patients must select a pharmacy for prescripti­on delivery, where necessary.

“Some would like home deliveries and some of the pharmacies do facilitate that. It is something that we are looking into as well,” Bowen said.

VIDEO CHAT NUMBERS GROWING

Patients have the option of choosing to consult with doctors via instant messaging, voice call, or video chat.

The most popular option has been text messaging, but video has overtaken it since the emergence of the novel coronaviru­s in Jamaica, The Gleaner has learnt.

Chairman and CEO of Advanced Integrated Systems, Douglas Halsall, explained that telemedici­ne and other informatio­n technology solutions are pertinent to responding to the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Mobile money could not be more relevant than it is today. Not simply because it can pay bills remotely and online, but because it can substitute cash, that could be a conveyor of the disease,” Halsall explained.

He envisions telemedici­ne being used by more Jamaican doctors as well as patients.

“A doctor can be used far more efficientl­y by not having to spend travel time on the road when they could be seeing patients,” Halsall said.

In 2018, the Government embarked on a telemedici­ne pilot project for people in remote areas to access medical specialist­s at The University Hospital of the West Indies.

 ?? FILE ?? Dr Che Bowen of MDLink Telemedici­ne Services.
FILE Dr Che Bowen of MDLink Telemedici­ne Services.

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