Telehealth Success in VA, Medicare

NEWS RELEASE: Health Hero Network Says Recent Successes of Deployments with Medicare, VA Signal New Era of Telehealth. Successful Multi-Year Trials at VA, Medicare Show Telehealth-based Health Care Interventions Can Improve Care, Reduce Costs.

PALO ALTO Ca., January 23, 2009 Health Hero Network said today that the first large-scale, multi-year rollouts and evaluations of its Health Buddy® System have shown success in helping improve the care of high-cost Medicare beneficiaries and veterans while reducing costs and hospitalizations — signaling a new era of telehealth that will reshape an American healthcare landscape strained by an aging population, a reduction in caregivers and shrinking financial resources.

VA Telehealth Results

VA Results reported in TELEMEDICINE and e-HEALTH, VOL. 14 NO. 10. Care Coordination/Home Telehealth: The Systematic Implementation of Health Informatics, Home Telehealth, and Disease Management to Support the Care of Veteran Patients with Chronic Conditions. Adam Darkins, M.D., Patricia Ryan, R.N., M.S., Rita Kobb, M.N., A.P.R.N., Linda Foster, M.S.N., R.N., Ellen Edmonson, R.N., M.P.H., Bonnie Wakefield, Ph.D., R.N., and Anne E. Lancaster, B.Sc. Department of Veterans Affairs, Office of Care Coordination Services, Washington, D.C.

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Information Technology in Health Care: Still The Big Lever

For a decade now, just about every service industry has taken for granted the benefits of information technology: Increased productivity, faster and better service, and access to services from home. All actionable information is recorded and shared electronically so that ever smarter information systems can help us anticipate and prevent problems. Whether it is retail, financial services, or even fast food, productivity in everything has gone through the roof.

Every service industry except health care, that is.

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Innovations in Chronic Care: The Model of Care from Partners in Health in Rwanda

Filed under: Global,Health,Ideas — Tags: , , , , , , — Steve Brown @ 2:34 pm November 5, 2008

Partners in Health has been improving chronic care in rural communities in Rwanda through an innovative model of care inspired by Paul Farmer. The regional hospital sees its mission as training community members to extend care into the community and monitor patients at home in order to prevent disease complications and the need for hospitalization. The hospital tracks symptoms and medications using electronic medical record (EMR) systems based on open source technologies. Meanwhile, the United States continues to neglect reforming our crisis-oriented health system because “we can’t afford it”, and the cost of chronic care continues to explode as the population ages. With far fewer resources, but with more creativity and courage, innovative leaders in Rwanda are creating new models of care based on prevention because they can’t afford not to. Maybe we can learn something from Rwanda.