While it has existed in the healthcare
landscape for over a decade and its benefits lauded, telemedicine adoption has
so far been modest, if not disappointing, as several interconnected and
difficult barriers have not yet been overcome--which could use a shot in the
arm with greater collaboration between the public and private sectors.
Telemedicine, broadly defined, is the
provision of healthcare or medical information and services via communication
networks such as telephone and broadband lines. Over the last few years, as
broadband initiatives around the world became more pervasive, telemedicine has
been "revived and revolutionized", said Sash Murkerjee, senior market
analyst, IDC Health Insights Asia-Pacific.
From just phone calls between a doctor and
patient, telemedicine now includes teleconsultations, videoconferencing, and
real-time remote patient monitoring using mobile devices, she noted.
As a healthcare delivery program, it has been
around for more than a decade, but adoption rates have remained
"disappointing" and deployments worldwide are at best described as
emerging and "siloed", said William Chew, managing director of
myHealth Sentinel. The company is a Singapore telehealth service provider
offering applications that enable doctors to monitor vital signs of chronic
care patients from their homes.
One of the most prevalent reasons for the low
adoption was the lack of support by governments and insurance companies to
reimburse patients for the cost of telemedicine services and devices, he said
in an e-mail.
Murkerjee also noted that despite the
potential benefits and growth for telemedicine services, actual adoption had
been "steady but modest". A lack of clinical reimbursement--and hence
incentive--was one longstanding barrier preventing telemedicine initiatives
from taking off beyond pilot programs, she pointed out.
Another key reason why people were still reluctant
to take it up was the lack of examples of telemedicine succeeding on a wider
scale beyond pilot programs, she added.
Lack in access, awareness and legal
understanding
Another common lament among market players was
that broadband penetration has continued to be a major hurdle for telemedicine
adoption.
Ron Emerson, global director of healthcare at
Polycom, emphasized that broadband network infrastructure was crucial to the
implementation of telemedicine in order for a seamless connection between doctors
and patients. "A well-working telemedicine solution ensures the quality
and efficiency of the technology and the practitioner as well as the patient's
well-being." Still, bandwidth penetration has remained a challenge
particularly in emerging markets such as Vietnam, Indonesia and the
Philippines, he said.
Chew noted that the limited availability of
broadband networks is more pronounced in large, poorer rural populations within
countries too, such as those in India, China and Indonesia.
He added that the low awareness of the
benefits of telemedicine among practitioners and patients has also been
stalling adoption. Patient reluctance and incompliance were part of this
barrier--for instance, patients above the age of 65 may have difficulty or be
hesitant to adapt to the new technology.
Murkerjee pointed out that legal implications
and liability issues were also impeding progress, as medical practitioners may
be reluctant to practice telemedicine for medical indemnity issues.
Standards, regulations to create ubiquity
According to Chew, developments in telehealth
markets have so far been sporadic and siloed, rather than ubiquitous. For
instance, the institutional telehealth market, comprising public agencies and
hospitals, has been stable--but stagnant--with deployments limited to pilots
and usually based on proprietary device technologies and siloed management
systems. Even in the consumer telehealth market, which has seen an explosion of
innovation such as mobile apps, most are also proprietary with data either
stored in the user's smartphone or uploaded to the vendor's own Web portal, he
pointed out.
The telehealth landscape will have to move
from a multiple siloed, proprietary technology-based model to more
client-oriented, open standards service platform models, so as to eliminate the
need for heavy investments from end-users, be they doctors, patients or
caretakers, Chew emphasized.
Emerson added that the alignment of telehealth
with the overall goals of healthcare organizations was still an issue to
overcome. In emerging markets, for instance, the lack of defined policies and
regulations was a hurdle since clear procedures were needed to govern any
implementation of telemedicine, ensuring practitioners can perform their jobs
efficiently and patients' comfort is safeguarded.
That is one reason why telemedicine adoption
has been uneven across the globe, he noted. In developing regions, regulations
and policies for telemedicine implementation wre still in their infancy and
have yet to be finalized, whereas in developed markets, telemedicine
implementation--thanks to electronic health records--has led to clinical
efficiency, cost benefits and high patient satisfaction, he said.
Needs public-private joint support
Observers also highlighted that both public
and the private sectors played important roles in pushing for greater adoption
of telemedicine.
Murkerjee emphasized that if the challenges
and barriers were resolved at the government level, telemedicine adoption would
become more rampant. Nonetheless, she noted that telemedicine projects tend to
be government-funded initiatives and eventually die down once funds dry up,
particularly in developing countries. Instead public-private partnerships
should be carried out as these are more sustaining, she said.
Chew said telehealth is already widely
acknowledged by governments and healthcare providers around the world as the
"future of healthcare". The essential ingredient for success is the
"concrete and sustained support" by governments in terms of educating
the general public as well as developing economic incentives which will drive
user acceptance and adoption.
For example, governments could create policies
that require insurance companies to officially recognize telemedicine and
reimburse doctors for its use. There can also be subsidies or tax incentives
for patients to purchase remote monitoring devices with the supporting
broadband access.
Jamie Yap
ZDNet Asia
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