| December
25, 1999
by Donna Birch
McClatchey Publications
At one time, Billy experienced chronic ear infections. But scheduling
an appointment with a specialist such as Dr. Senders often was difficult.
For patients enrolled in state and federally funded health programs such
as Healthy Families and Medi-Cal, getting an appointment with a specialist
can take weeks, even months, because of the scarcity of specialists willing
to take on those patients.
But Billy and his grandparents, Bill and Carol Wright, were able to confer
with Senders while remaining in Hughson, saving them from a four-hour
round trip by car to the doctor's Sacramento office.
Senders didn't have to trek to Hughson to see Billy, either. He was able
to conduct the examination while in Sacramento. He did so using telemedicine,
a technologically sophisticated method of bringing specialty care to rural
communities.
"Telemedicine will help us improve access to specialty care,"
said Kathy Kohrman, associate director of ambulatory services for the
Health Services Agency. "Many of our patients have to travel to Fresno,
Sacramento and the Bay Area for those services."
With telemedicine, a doctor or doctors can consult with a patient in
another location using a computer, telephone line, camera and microphone.
Cameras and computers are located in the office where the patient is
and also the office of the specialist. The parties on each end can see
and hear each other. Images the camera captures are displayed on the computer
monitors.
In Billy's case, which was a demonstration to show how telemedicine works,
a primary care physician was in the room with him. That doctor, David
Narita, used a high-tech otoscope, an ear scope equipped with a tiny but
powerful camera no bigger than the head of a finishing nail. Images of
Billy's inner ears were transmitted to Senders' computer.
In some ways, telemedicine exceeds regular exams. The cameras can zoom
in, making images appear much bigger than when looking with the naked
eye. Some cameras are able to take snapshot images, so if the person handling
a camera doesn't have a steady hand, the physician can analyze a motionless
image.
Telemedicine can be used in a variety of specialties: dermatology, cardiology,
pediatrics, orthopedics, oncology and psychiatry.
The Hughson Medical office, one of the Stanislaus County Health Service
Agency's out-patient clinics, was chosen to become one of 41 telemedicine
sites, joining a network throughout the state.
Blue Cross of California, the insurance company which is the largest
health care provider of state programs such as Medi-Cal and Healthy Families,
got a $1.8 million grant through the Rural Health Demonstration Project.
The insurance company will help establish 24 telemedicine sites in 18
counties. Part of the grant, approximately $230,000, will go to 17 sites
that already offer a form of telemedicine, such as the Primary Care Clinic
in Sonora. The money will help those sites expand and upgrade equipment.
The program will eventually link the 41 telemedicine sites with six specialty
sites throughout the state. The specialty sites include Children's Hospital
and Cedar-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, pediatric centers in Humbolt
and Ventura counties, a medical center in Shasta County and UC-Davis.
Besides buying telemedicine equipment, the grant money will be used to
help train the clinics' doctors and staff to use the machinery.
The Hughson clinic expects to start using telemedicine early next year,
says manager Jim Austin.
The concept of telemedicine isn't entirely new, says Kathleen Brown,
Blue Cross' telemedicine coordinator. It started when astronauts first
ventured into space.
But telemedicine didn't take off until the early to mid-1990's as computer
technology became faster, more powerful and affordable.
Five years ago, telemedicine equipment and its setup cost close to $300,000.
Now the cost can be as low as $5,000.
Used by permission of The Times.
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