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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page paper that discusses the applications and trends for e-health/tele-health in Canada, something that is strongly supported by the government. Specific examples are provided. The essay concludes with an overview of the network that is being attempted in the United States. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MM12_PGeheal.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
. . It is primarily responsible for the development of pan-Canadian electronic health records framework built upon provincial systems." Thus, the first application of e-health found in Canada is
a record system that is electronically based and that integrated with all provinces. There are actually several areas on this health infoway: Pan-Canadian Healthcare, infrastructure, tele-health, pharmacy medical profiles, and
laboratory systems (Intellect, 2004). There are two major types of e-health care initiatives: "developing a health care information network strategy to create a core provincial infrastructure . . .
[and] provincial funding of local/regional consortia of health Providers for specific programs" (Intellect, 2004). For example, Ontario has a program called "shared Systems for Health" (Intellect, 2004) that includes an
e-physician project as well as a family health network (Intellect, 2004). Alberta has a program called e-Health Network that allows different health care providers, such as physicians, labs, pharmacies and
hospitals to share data (Intellect, 2004). Some provinces are paying physicians between $600 and $650 per month if they move to a paperless office (Intellect, 2004). Alberta pays physicians 70
percent of the cost to install clinical systems (Intellect, 2004). Another trend is real-time tele-medicine practice (The Conference Board of Canada, 2005). This practice is being explored in terms of
cost effectiveness (The Conference Board of Canada, 2005). In Australia, for example, a physician located in one area can examine a child in another area through tele-pediatrics (The Conference Board
of Canada, 2005). This allows more consultations with experts and decreases the miles a parent (or the physician) would need to travel (The Conference Board of Canada, 2005). Tele-neurology operates
on the same type of system but uses video conferencing (The Conference Board of Canada, 2005). A neurologist located in one area can view and examine a patient who needs
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