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Daily FYI

October 12, 2009

In-home checkups provided

Source: Mankato Free Press

Through the use of new in-home telemonitoring technology, patients served by Good Samaritan Society Home Care throughout Blue Earth, Brown, Le Sueur, Nicollet and Sibley counties are getting a checkup every day in the comfort of their homes.

The Honeywell HomMed Health Telehealth Monitoring System allows staff to provide daily, real-time clinical information, according to Nancy Vogel, director of home care.

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Using Telemedicine to Cope with Possible Flu Outbreak

Source: 13wham.com

The Golisano Children’s Hospital is preparing to use technology as a way to help cope with a possible swine flu outbreak.

The hospital already uses telemedicine to allow doctors to see patients in other parts of town using a webcam, but administrators say that the system would be ideal for dealing with the swine flu.

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Telemedicine Market to Hit $3.6 Billion

Source: Health Data Management

The market for telemedicine devices and services will generate $3.6 billion in annual revenue within five years, a new study claims.

The study by the Silver Spring, Md.-based research firm Pike & Fischer, says mobile-services companies, such as AT&T, Verizon, Sprint and Nextel, will take a sizeable chunk of the business. It predicts that smaller software and device manufacturers likely will be targets for acquisition.

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Google Health partners with 'telehealth' patient-doctor service

Source: Medical Marketing & Media

Google Health announced the integration of MDLiveCare technology, a service that offers patients access to doctors from remote locations, via webcam or telephone, into its personal health record offering.

The partnership, announced today during the Health 2.0 conference in San Francisco, allows MDLiveCare to flow an individual's medical data into a Google Health personal health record (PHR).

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Telesurgery Successful in Iraq

Source: Federal Telemedicine News

According to a story appearing in MC4’s September newsletter issue of “The Gateway”, LTC T. Sloane Guy IV, M.D., a cardiothoracic surgeon, found that he was not always doing run-of-the-mill procedures in his specialty. However, as Chief of Clinical Services with the 249th General Hospital in Afghanistan until 2006, he successfully completed all of his procedures but he would have been happy with another specialist or two by his side. He could see the need especially in his case to contact with operating rooms in the U.S. to talk to other specialists and to help him assist with his procedures from afar.

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Telemedicine Spending to Approach $3.6 Billion Annually by 2014, Report Projects

Source: Earth Times

The market for telemedicine devices and services will generate nearly $3.6 billion in annual revenue within the next five years, with mobile-services companies taking a sizeable chunk of that business, market research firm Pike & Fischer projects in a new report.

The need to control costs, along with the development and expansion of faster wireless broadband networks, smartphones, and data compression solutions, will drive the market growth, P&F says.

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Telemedicine finding its way into physician workflows

Source: Fierce Mobile Healthcare

In a story about telemedicine and mobile healthcare that ran over the weekend, a HealthDay headline boasted: "In Health Care Today, It's Electronic All the Way." That's a rather absurd statement for an industry that still keeps most of its records on paper, but the point is that a few forms of telemedicine have become almost routine parts of the workflow of some physicians. (Think snapping a photo of a skin mole and emailing it to your doctor, or putting on a blood-pressure cuff that's linked to a wireless network to upload data to a cardiologist.)

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