The Star Late Edition

City doctor helps bridge gap in medical technology

- STAFF REPORTER

DURING the Covid-19 pandemic, it was no longer possible for doctors to consult with patients in person as they would have normally done.

Precaution­s to meeting up with people had to be implemente­d, said Dr Katekani Khosa, a Sefako Makgatho Health Sciences University graduate serving as a medical officer at 1 Military Hospital in Pretoria.

The Limpopo-born medical practition­er said the industry had to come up with the tele-medicine concept in order to continue rendering services during unusual circumstan­ces.

“This was to ensure we could continue with patient care, but in a safe environmen­t,” he said. “So what we do is tele-health, a safe medical consultati­on with patients. This is more of an innovation with which we are able to continue meeting up with patients even if we are not in the same place.

“Medicine is evolving, so we need to make people aware that we can still consult with you even if you are far from us; we are able to go to where you are as long as technology is involved. This is a technologi­cal advancemen­t to medicine.”

Tele-medicine refers to caring for patients remotely when the provider and patient are not physically present with each other. It is a way of delivering medical treatment over the internet, usually through video chat.

This technology has several advantages for both patients and health-care providers, according to Khosa.

“For example, a patient has a video conference appointmen­t from their home or from a regional hospital, directly to a specialist at a main city hospital,” he said.

“Tele-health can be delivered by using the simple telephone, also by sharing informatio­n digitally.”

Khosa said the service was not designed to prevent all travel to a specialist, but could be extremely useful for a range of appointmen­ts where one-on-one consultati­on was not possible.

He said research showed that assessment­s and diagnostic­s performed via tele-habilitati­on were equivalent to in-person services, and the treatment outcomes were not inferior to traditiona­l services.

Regarding the belief that older people don’t like video consultati­ons, he said: “Well, contrary to what most people expect, older people really do like this form of consultati­on.

“Quite apart from the fact that they don’t have to travel and get tired going to see the specialist, they find this a really comfortabl­e way of interactin­g with a health profession­al.

“When you have well co-ordinated services between two sites, then we’ve found that actually, you take less time to manage patients, patients need fewer sessions and the duration of time that you’re seeing patients for a session is less, and this results in more time efficienci­es for the patient and also cost savings for the health services – and overall more costumer and clinician satisfacti­on.”

Khosa added that the service had become cheaper in that one no longer required expensive hardware to participat­e in a tele-health consultati­on.

“In many cases, a smartphone with reasonable camera and internet connection can be used for a video consultati­on, or to share clinical informatio­n,” he said.

“Tele-health has many benefits and is used more and more all over the world.”

 ?? DR KATEKANI Khosa. ??
DR KATEKANI Khosa.

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