Jo Duxbury

MARKETING

Marketing 101

VIRTUAL PRESS OFFICESTM
(011) 807 3294   itnews@itweb.co.za | sales@itweb.co.za   Fri, 27 Nov 2009
You are here Home Computing

Boost for Free State tele-health

Government will use telemedicine to ease patient backlogs at hospitals, says health minister Aaron Motsoaledi.

The Free State Health Department will spend over R3.5 million to roll out telemedicine solutions in the next financial year, in an effort to improve service delivery.

The department says it has made funding available for telemedicine units in five regional hospitals: the Bongani, Dihlabeng, Boitumelo, Mofumahadi Manapo Mopeli, Diamant and Jagersfontein hospitals.

“It is a true fact that our healthcare environment stretches the abilities of the available healthcare professionals to their limit. It is a priority to optimally utilise the available health professionals and to subsequently use all technological resources at our disposal,” says the department.

Telemedicine rooms will be established at each site to house the equipment. The solutions, which will use different communications networks, will include video conferencing, three cameras, a codec unit for transmitting video and data over telephone and ISDN lines, touch panels, and basic computing equipment.

The department opened its first telemedicine site in March 2009, at Botshabelo Hospital. The Public Healthcare telemedicine partnership was an initiative between the Free State Department of Health, MTN SA Foundation and the Medical Research Council.

“Telemedicine is no longer a technology awaiting application. Rather, this clinical tool, which has been utilised in actual patient care for many phases, is now ready for widespread implementation as the equipment has advanced to the point where its applications are practical and potentially cost-effective,” says the department.

Improving efficiency

The equipment will also be used in mobile telemedicine stations that can be used for education, communication and information purposes by the rural community tele-centres.

The department says once regional sites have been connected, the project will be dedicated to establishing additional networks. Connecting remote rural clinics to surrounding secondary medical centres through microwaves and mobile radio communications infrastructure will be investigated.

National health minister Aaron Motsoaledi previously stated telemedicine would be used to ease patient backlogs facing hospitals. While general budgetary and resource limitations were an issue, the technologies would help the department reduce expenses and improve its service delivery, he added.

In 1998, the national department implemented a three-year telemedicine pilot project. Since the end of the three-phase pilot project, in 2002, government has been implementing the system in clinics and hospitals across the country.

“The telemedicine programme will contribute directly and indirectly to our patients and members of the community through reducing long queues at specialist clinics; reducing waiting periods via a booking system; better case management and limited administrative procedures. On the whole, the system allows us to work more efficient and effectively,” says the department.

Related stories:

                   
  POST YOUR COMMENT

 Comments (1)

nkosiw said:

Tele-health
Starting something like this at regional level is a complete waste of time and money. This should be done at a national level to prevent each province doing their own thing (as usual) and then spending millions to interface with each other.
report abuse
vote down
vote up
November 29, 2009 Votes: +1

busy

 

Industry news


Publications

 

 

 

IBM is a values based company that creates and applies technology to make the world work better. Today, over 400,000 global IBMers integrate hardware,
software and services to enable forward-thinking enterprises,institutions and people everywhere to succeed on a smarter planet. 
Co-Sponsor
We’re on your side when it comes to
maximising the value from your Software.
SAP® BUSINESS All-in-One is the right choice. SCT’s implementation makes the difference. Click here for more info.

Sponsored links


ITWeb Enterprise Mobility
21 - 22 April 2010| Vodaworld, Midrand
Early bird fee: R3 495.00 (excl VAT)
Attend this event and find out what is being done to successfully increase the capabilities, business value and the cost savings of enterprise mobility solutions and how to effectively manage your virtual workforce.

Click here to book your place today!

Diamond Sponsor

Gambling

INTERNET

Don’t bet on it