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the US will eventually adopt telemedicine
It’s never soon enough, but the US will eventually adopt telemedicine just as Europe has - the financial weight of our aging population will require it. No matter what gets spent in AMA lobbying dollars, the US must either adopt or go broke.
When I talk with people about telehealth, the objection that I hear most often is two-fold: (1) telehealth will lead to over-prescribing of antibiotics and increased antibiotic resistance; and (2) telemedicine will be practiced by physicians who don’t have a long personal history with the patient, thus leading to poor care.
The first objection sounds like an AMA media-ready sound-bite - we wouldn’t have widespread concern about antibiotic resistance if over-prescribing weren’t already a problem.
As to the second objection, like much of health care, telehealth will work best with an infrastructure that supports it, starting with a HIPAA-compliant but sharable electronic medical record so that telehealth doctors can “know” the patients that they’ve likely never seen before. Even though our challenges in HIPAA-compliant data sharing are real, this objection is a bit of a red herring: our military and their dependents have been seeing different doctors every visit for at least 50 years. I’m an army brat and my care didn’t suffer by seeing different physicians each visit — but at the same time, there were no reimbursement agencies pressuring my doctors to see me for 10 minutes or less.
VA staistics from 2003
The below statistics are from the VA's original Rural Health Study done with the most basic equipment available prior to 2003 EX: Health Buddy. When I saw these numbers I knew Telehealth was going to be everywhere in a few years. I sure got that wrong. We prefer to continue to provide care with one hand tied behind our back.
Rural Home Care outcomes data is as follows: (-for decrease; + for increase)
*data derived from comparison with usual care group
RHCP Usual care
Hospital Admissions -60% +27%
BDOC -68% +32%
NHCU Admissions -81% +11%
NH BDOC -94% +18%
Clinic Visits -4% +22%
ER Visits -66% +19%
Pharmacy -59% +37%