Windsor Star

Ontario health report calls for more virtual visits, texting

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Accessing medical records through a secure app, texting with health-care providers, using e-consultati­ons for specialist­s — those are some of the ways Ontario’s special adviser on health care envisions the increased use of virtual care in the province.

Dr. Rueben Devlin and the premier’s council on improving health care delivered their second report Tuesday, and themes of its recommenda­tions include better integratin­g the system, innovation and efficiency.

“An integrated health-care system will improve access and availabili­ty of services throughout the health-care system, will have a positive impact on wait times and will help solve the problem of hallway health care,” the report said.

On any given day, at least 1,000 people are being treated in Ontario hospital hallways, Devlin’s first report found.

In an interview, Devlin spoke about the importance of virtual care, which includes phone calls, secure email, texting and audiovisua­l engagement.

“For most people we envision it as a software issue, so you have a secure app,” he said.

The government should also introduce legislatio­n that would allow a patient to own their medical informatio­n and have it travel with them from provider to provider, Devlin said.

Right now, some patients can access lab or diagnostic imaging results online, and that type of service should be expanded, Devlin said.

“We just need to consolidat­e that and make sure that when you move from one part of the system to the other, that that informatio­n goes with you,” he said.

Health Minister Christine Elliott said in a statement that the report aligns with what her ministry is doing.

The province is consolidat­ing 14 local health integratio­n networks, Cancer Care Ontario, ehealth Ontario and other agencies into a new organizati­on called Ontario Health. It is also establishi­ng local health teams to co-ordinate care.

The Ontario Telemedici­ne Network, which works to further virtual care, recently laid off 44 of its 265 employees. A spokeswoma­n said it supports the government’s transforma­tion agenda and work to align with that unfortunat­ely included reorganiza­tion and staffing changes. A spokesman for Elliott said OTN made pragmatic decisions about how it can more effectivel­y use taxpayer dollars.

New Democrat Marit Stiles suggested that Tuesday’s report aligns so well with the government’s plan because Devlin is a friend of the premier’s appointed by him to a lucrative gig.

“A lot of the recommenda­tions, informatio­n in here, is really just a regurgitat­ion it seems of decisions the government has already made, a path they’ve already said they’re headed down,” he said.

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