Telemedicine may be key to health reform

Published: June 23, 2009 at 1:44 AM

ANN ARBOR, Mich., June 23 (UPI) -- Several U.S. medical experts say telemedicine needs to be a core component of healthcare reform.

The white paper, published online in Telemedicine and e-Health, argues clinical medicine needs to include telemedicine -- the transferring of medical information by telephone, the Internet or other networks to facilitate consulting, chronic disease management and self-care -- to help contain cost inflation and provide other benefits that would greatly exceed the costs.

"While not a panacea, telemedicine offers significant opportunities to address the issues of inequities in access to care, cost containment, and quality enhancement," lead authors Rashid Bashshur of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor and Gary Shannon of the University of Kentucky in Lexington said in a statement.

"Telemedicine is the common element to make reform succeed," the co-editor of the journal publishing the whitepaper Dr. Ronald Merrell of Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond said. "Telemedicine involves stunning new technologies that go well beyond just using electronic health records, which can ensure both quality care and cost savings."

© 2009 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Genes allow humans longer life than apes (2 min)
Screening uncovers kids' heart conditions (5 min)
Study: People fickle about vaccines (6 min)
Comcast agrees to buy NBC Universal (18 min)
Google offers publishers concessions (33 min)
Neonatal feeding milestones crucial (47 min)
Prairie chickens on rebound in Missouri
fark
If there was any doubt as to which list William C. Caldwell III of Georgia is on, it was eliminated...
More unidentified voters surface at Illiinois cemetery
Screw you, loafers, homeless people and wishing wells
Power of Fark combines with power of attorney to touch children. Wait
Criticize the Iranian government on the streets of Tehran, get clubbed. Criticize them on Facebook...
The cheesification of the Wall Street Journal is complete, with this utterly vapid article on male...