Editorial Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Telemedicine in developing countries

2001; BMJ; Volume: 323; Issue: 7312 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1136/bmj.323.7312.524

ISSN

0959-8138

Autores

S M Edworthy,

Tópico(s)

Healthcare Systems and Technology

Resumo

Clinical review p 557 The advent of modern communication technology has unleashed a new wave of opportunities and threats to the delivery of health services.1 Telemedicine, a broad umbrella term for delivery of medical care at a distance, has reached around the world, and now health professionals can communicate faster, more widely, and more directly with clients and colleagues, no matter where they are.2 Telemedicine may in fact have a more profound impact on developing countries than on developed ones. Satellite stations in Uzbekistan, wireless connections in Cambodia, and microwave transmission in Kosova have shown that the low bandwidth internet can reach into remote areas, some of them with troubled political situations and uncertain economic environments. It has been more difficult and costly to implement broad bandwidth applications in these locations. Nevertheless, with the internet come email, websites, chatlines, multimedia presentations, and occasional opportunities for synchronous communication via internet phones and videoconferencing. Each of these communication vehicles provides an opportunity for medical education and medical care, not to mention collegial support.3 Of course, they …

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