¶ … Policy Brief on Telemedicine
Overview of the Importance of the Issue
In today's healthcare environment characterized by a dearth of healthcare providers, increased prevalence of chronic ailments, and mounting healthcare expenses, telemedicine is a promising tool for improving healthcare delivery's efficiency. The necessity for telemedicine appears to be compounded further by the factors listed below:
A significant rise in the population of U.S.A -- a growth of up to about 363 million (i.e., 20%) is predicted from 2008 to 2030
Dearth of educated, licenced, and trained healthcare professionals
Growing global prevalence of chronic ailments, including diabetes, obstructive lung disease, and heart failure
Demand for effective care of home-bound, physically challenged, and aged patients
Adverse events, illness, and injuries at physician's offices and hospitals
Need for improving population and community health
Lack of health facilities and healthcare specialists in rural localities (Hein, 2009)
The above challenges may be addressed effectively through telemedicine. For example, telemedicine is able to maximize the utilization of available healthcare providers by enabling remote diagnoses, monitoring and treatment recommendations for patients residing in rural parts of America. Additionally, telemedicine ensures that patients' risk of contracting infections is reduced, by limiting or completely eliminating the need for patients to visit physicians' offices or hospitals for receiving health care (Hein, 2009).
Population Affected
Obstructive lung disease, heart failure, diabetes, and other chronic illnesses require treatment over a long-term, together with the services of several specialists. All this considerably increases their...
The greater availability of patient records can make it easier to create false claims, through electronic tampering. This is yet another risk of telemedicine, which must be guarded against through encryption and proper security infrastructure. Selling patient information to external entities? People with long-term diseases like diabetes, or even those only genetically predisposed to genetic conditions, could be denied job opportunities or refused health insurance "if information stolen from data banks
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Telemedicine: Will telemedicine improve the quality of healthcare and its delivery for remotely located advanced healthcare para-professionals? The basic purpose of this study is to discuss whether telemedicine will improve the quality of health care and it's delivery for remotely located advanced health care para-professionals. The scope of the study is over seeing as it covers the implication of implementation of telemedicine as a professional genre. It would also show how the
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Reducing Nursing Turnover by Implementing Innovative E-Health: A New Strategy for Incentivizing Nurses and Improving Organizational Culture Problem Identification: Nursing turnover rates are a serious issue for hospitals: they are costly and result in lost time and energy in continuously training new staff (Twibell, 2012). Identifying the main reasons for nursing turnover and addressing them can lead to better nurse retention (Trivellas, Gerogiannis, Svarna, 2013). The problem of nurse retention has been identified
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