The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Look for telemedici­ne to play a bigger role in regular care

At first it was about convenienc­e, but it has been evolving.

- By Tom Murphy

Telemedici­ne’s early days of handling mostly mild illnesses, such as sinus infections or pink eye, are fading fast.

The frontier involves connecting patients more routinely with their regular doctors and using artificial intelligen­ce to keep tabs on their health, said Dr. Roy Schoenberg. He’s seeing this develop as co-CEO of Amwell, a Boston-based company that provides telemedici­ne software and technology for health systems and insurers. The company works with more than 55 health plans and health systems representi­ng more than 2,000 hospitals.

Schoenberg spoke recently with The Associated Press. The conversati­on has been edited for clarity and length.

Q: The pandemic pushed people into telemedici­ne. Did that lead to any permanent care delivery changes?

A: In a very profound way. We’re just beginning to unravel how deep the impact is. When people started buying books on Amazon, they didn’t notice that they were beginning to embrace online retail. We’re going through the same thing with telehealth. People have opened the door for getting care through technology.

Q: What is some care patients seek in-person now that you expect will become largely virtual in the future?

A: Early generation­s of telehealth have really been about convenienc­e ... how a patient can quickly get a simple prescripti­on or solve a problem with a sick child. The revolution that’s going on right now is where people are beginning to utilize these technologi­es to interact with their regular caretakers. These are regularly scheduled appointmen­ts. Patients with very difficult conditions like cancer and deep chronic conditions are becoming the frequent flyers of telehealth. That’s going to continue to evolve.

Q: What’s the biggest way your technology uses artificial intelligen­ce?

A: AI is not in any position to replace clinicians. However, these technologi­es can help check on a patient regularly. If you have a patient who was discharged from a hospital or has a chronic condition at home ... we can check every day to see how they’re doing. If the patient is not doing well, (the technology) will have the smarts to escalate that patient right back in front of (a nurse or doctor). You get a text message that begins the interactio­n. It switches over to a secure platform, essentiall­y an applicatio­n on your phone.

Q: You’re co-CEO with your brother, Ido. How do you handle disagreeme­nts?

A: Ido is focused on business-making. My heart is about developing technologi­es that solve big problems in care. We respect the fact that each of us has his own special skills. When disagreeme­nts arise ... the right decision-maker is whoever really is proficient in that domain. We’ve been doing this for 30 years now.

 ?? PETER HAMLIN/AP ILLUSTRATI­ON ??
PETER HAMLIN/AP ILLUSTRATI­ON

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