Hyderabad: As people across the globe have been put under lockdown, restricting movement and social meetings after the coronavirus outbreak, telemedicine has started gaining immense popularity as it is helping patients connect with doctors by means of telecommunications technology.
According to an international journal, Lee H. Schwamm, MD, Director of the Center for TeleHealth at Massachusetts General Hospital and Vice President of Virtual Care at Partners Healthcare, and his colleagues believes that virtual care, by eliminating the barriers of time and distance, is very useful for providing care that is patient-centred, lower cost, more convenient than traditional methods for delivering care, especially during a pandemic.
Lee H. Schwamm, MD, Center for TeleHealth; Vice President of Virtual Care suggests that it is important for health systems to reap the benefits of this digital innovation to redesign inpatient and ambulatory care delivery now and in the near future.
The journal describes the scope and reach of the virtual care innovation introduced at Partners Healthcare and also provides guidance to other health care systems on implementing virtual care tools. It also provides guidance to address challenges to their use during and after the pandemic.