Potential impact of telehealth on socio-economic stability and sustainability in the process of globalization.
Stachura, Max E. ; Khashanshina, Elena V.
Abstract
Sustainable socio-economic development depends upon a well-trained
and healthy workforce. Family health also influences worker stability.
Access to healthcare in both rural and urban settings is a world-wide
challenge: No nation can afford to replicate comprehensive health care
resources in every large and small community. On the other hand, as the
potential for Internet access approaches universality, consumer access
to health information potentially will cease to be a limiting factor,
and this fact will change the role of healthcare providers. Previously
the custodians of health information, providers are now becoming
advisers about the use, specific relevance, and applicability of that
health information in individual situations. Telenetworking may be the
only economically viable way to make healthcare resources available to
individuals throughout communities, regions, or nations. However,
although clinicians in different settings will use the same information
to address a problem, they will do so using perspectives modified by
their local cultural, ethnic, and socio-economic environment. The
broadband infrastructure required for cost-effective, sustainable
telehealthcare has much in common with the infrastructure requirements
for tele-education, tele-business, and tele-government: A unique
healthcare telecommunication infrastructure is not necessary. Telehealth
can leverage commercial telecommunications networks, but universal
access to basic healthcare services and health information must be, at
least in part, a governmental responsibility. Thus, it is essential that
barriers to universal broadband access be overcome through combinations
of commercial business activity and public policy. The resulting general
access will contribute importantly to long-term economic and political
stability and sustainability. Tele-optimized population health is a
nationally-, ethnically-, religiously-, governmentally-, and
racially-neutral bonus that can result from coordinated application of
medical and telecommunication resources and capacity.
Introduction
"Globalization" has been defined as the several processes
leading toward a world relatively undivided by national, social,
economic, environmental, technological, and cultural barriers (1, 2).
There is general agreement that globalization has an impact on the
socio-economic status of all countries. However, opinions differ as to
whether globalization's effects on individuals and societies are
consistently positive or negative. One driving force that facilitates
the processes of globalization is the ongoing revolution in both the
technology and accessibility of telecommunications and information.
Walker: "With astonishing speed, the Internet has evolved from an
obscure communications environment for computer science researchers to
an essential element of the communications infrastructure used by
virtually all segments of society" (3).
In the healthcare arena, globalized advanced telecommunication
capabilities facilitate both universal access to health-related
information and enhanced service delivery across geographic, cultural,
and socio-economic barriers. Universal access to health-related
information makes it possible to (a) rapidly disseminate new
discoveries, (b) enhance the diffusion and adoption of standards for
diagnosis, treatment, and practice, (c) promulgate new
healthcare-related tools such as pharmaceuticals and
diagnostic/treatment equipment, and (d) enable new services. Beyond
information access and sharing is "telehealth", defined as
"... the use of electronic information and telecommunications
technologies to support long-distance clinical health care, patient and
professional health-related education, public health and health
administration" (4).
Advanced telecommunication enhances global knowledge of what is
possible in many areas of endeavor, including healthcare. That knowledge
then drives both expectations and the identification of goals that
target what can and should be achieved. Development and achievement of
these goals depends upon overcoming a variety of barriers that encompass
issues of policy, economics, law, education, culture, technology, and
labor. Our purpose in this paper is to explore some of these issues,
specifically in terms of the globalization of healthcare. Our
perspective is that the process of globalization of healthcare will in
balance be beneficial, but that complete global homogeneity in
healthcare is neither achievable nor desirable.
Stage Setting: Healthcare of the Individual, the Community, and the
Whole
Healthcare is comprised of two broad components: (a) care provided
to an individual, including that individual's personal
responsibility for compliance and chronic self-care, and (b) maintenance
of a community environment that is sanitary, safe, and
health-promotional by means of active prevention, screening, and
education programs.
The intimate interaction between a patient and a clinician is the
core element in individual healthcare. It is initiated when an
individual seeks medical services; it is paid for by the individual
and/or the individual's private or governmental insurer. Many argue
that it is intuitively obvious that healthcare services are therefore
locally provided activities. The historical evolution of healthcare and
healthcare delivery systems appears to have affirmed that view (5).
Others identify this presumption that healthcare services must be
provided locally as a root reason for the continual rise in the cost of
medical care (6).
On the other hand, individual care occurs in the context of, and is
greatly influenced by, the individual's health environment: clean
water, sanitation and pollution control, health screening, immunization,
workplace safety, and child and maternal health. This societal context
requires socio-technical systems that are not individually initiated,
but originate out of a collaboration among national and international
health organizations that set minimal and optimal standards. These
stakeholder organizations then work in collaboration with governments to
implement those standards. To the extent that globalization of
healthcare progresses, it is critical that developed nations share their
experience in these contextual areas with the developing world, but do
so respecting regional differences.
Stage Setting: The Advent of Advanced Telecommunication
Technologies
With widespread adoption of the Internet and World Wide Web in the
mid-1990's it became apparent that telehealth had the potential to
distribute and make accessible health-related information and contribute
to individual healthcare access by the geographically and
socio-economically underserved as well as by the physically challenged.
Further, telehealth offered the opportunity to develop and promote
uniform world-wide expectations for basic community health. In 1996
Hoben proposed several areas in which the Internet could be used for
healthcare including continuing medical education, online collaboration,
broad distribution of standardized clinical practice guidelines,
collection of disease management outcome information and health care
trends, health services planning, patient record access, and consumer
access to health-related information (7). Each of these proposals is at
least a partial reality today.
The Internet's communication power has the potential to
globalize medical knowledge and best practices, increase research
collaboration and sophistication, and facilitate rapid adoption of new
medical discoveries. However, reaping the benefits of this potential
will require core changes in individual attitudes, healthcare systems,
and governmental policies (8) because of healthcare disparities based on
socio-economic status, geography, gender, physical ability, race, and
ethnicity that persist worldwide (9). Access to health information and
services is critical for health promotion, disease prevention, and
medical therapy, but the strongest predictors of population health are
income levels, education levels, and gender equality (10), all of which
can be strongly influenced in general by globalization and specifically
by global communication capabilities.
Workforce Health Underlies Sustainable Socio-Economic Development
While the economic growth of developing countries outpaced that in
developed countries during the 1960s, increased global market
integration since 1980 reversed the trend in favor of the world's
wealthiest nations (11). As a consequence, globalization of the
world's economies is altering global health patterns. Where
economic growth reduces poverty, health status improves because higher
household incomes improve access to health-related goods and services (12). The reverse is also true. Social and economic disruption during
the early 1990's in the countries of the former Soviet Union was
associated with a reduced life-expectancy for both men and women (13).
Consequently, the ability of a country to achieve and sustain economic
growth is impaired when there is increased morbidity and mortality (14).
When globalization accelerated in the late 20th century, labor
markets in developed countries shifted from manufacturing to
service-sector jobs. As a result, during the 1990's, many
organizations in these countries were restructured and downsized,
exposing service sector workers, including healthcare providers, to high
unemployment rates, insecure job arrangements, and increased job-related
skill requirements (5). Vantera et al summarized growing evidence
linking restructuring to impaired employee health and adverse health
outcomes (15), including depression, anxiety, hypertension, coronary
artery disease, and increased physician visits, but paradoxically
decreased self-reported health status (16).
Worker job insecurity and ill health also produce secondary family
health consequences because part-time and irregularly employed workers
often lack access to employer sponsored family health, dental, and
pension benefits (17). Reduced income compromises the ability to make
best choices in terms of food and housing, further compromising
well-being. This cycle then accelerates with the consequent inability to
obtain loans or credit (18), worsening stress-related poor health. In
post-communist countries, market reform-induced structural and economic
changes dismantled socialized mechanisms that had provided free
universal access to healthcare services, leaving large portions of urban
and rural populations without even basic medical services (19).
The effectiveness of health systems is founded upon the
availability of capable healthcare providers (10). As the healthcare
industry responds to globalization, healthcare workers as a labor class
are not immune to globalization-related workplace stresses. For example,
part-time employment among Canadian healthcare workers increased
five-fold during the second half of the 20th century (5). In countries
transitioning away from centrally planned and government-owned economies
to market economies based on private ownership, globalization is
producing even greater effects and stresses. Slow economic growth,
increasing disparities of wealth, and disappearance of socialized
mechanisms for financing healthcare have deprived both urban and rural
residents of free universal access to health services, including the
most basic services (19). In these countries, the effect has been felt
by the poor and less educated as expected, but surprisingly by the
employed, educated, and skilled as well (13,19).
Globalization, Telehealth, and Clinician Relocation
Globalization as it applies to the health workforce, and any other
workforce that requires licensing and/or credentialing, potentially
implies the absence of national and sub-national borders that can
restrict clinical practice. Logically this potential absence of borders
would require a globally accepted set of licensing requirements, a
standard practice not yet achieved even among individual U.S. states.
Universal adoption of licensing requirements would allow licensed
healthcare workers to move more freely from state to state, province to
province, and country to country, within the constraints of immigration
law, just as a driver's license permits an individual to cross
political borders so long as local laws of the road are obeyed.
Even without this freedom of movement, however, emigration of
highly trained professionals currently occurs. Developed countries save
time and money by recruiting foreign professionals rather than
increasing domestic training capacity (20). Developing countries
frequently cannot absorb all their trainees because of inadequate
domestic development and industrialization (21). Thus, the flow of
highly trained health professionals tends to be from developing to
developed countries as these professionals first seek advanced training
and then attempt to both improve their socio-economic status and reduce
stress in their daily lives. For example, more than half the physicians
graduating from the All India Institute of Medical Services from 1956-80
are currently employed abroad (6).
Further, national policies do not consistently acknowledge ethical
obligations to return trainees to the developing country of origin (20).
As a result developed countries become increasingly dependent on
international medical graduates to deliver care in underserved areas
that are unattractive to domestic graduates (21). Biviano and Makarehchi
have questioned the wisdom of developed countries becoming dependent on
clinicians emigrating from developing countries to supply the workforce
they require to care for underserved areas, pointing out that in 2000,
international medical graduates comprised 25% of the US workforce with
clinicians holding J-1 waivers representing 60% of underserved area
service commitments (21). Thus, in terms of the healthcare workforce and
healthcare itself, the reality of globalization has been highly
profitable to some while negatively impacting many others (22),
particularly those in developing countries.
Human and Technical Healthcare Resources are Costly to Replicate
The existing healthcare infrastructure is continuously being
expanded by new healthcare technologies and new medications that
facilitate the diagnosis and management of clinical conditions. No
state, province, or country can afford to replicate the human and
physical resources required to deliver all available medical services in
all locations where they might be needed. Telecommunication spreads
awareness about these new developments and globalization increasingly
makes them available worldwide. These new tools are expensive.
Globalization efforts such as the Agreement on Trade-Related
Intellectual Property Rights help to support that high cost, by
exaggerating globalization effects that can undermine public health and
favor developed nations (10). However, caution with regard to arguments
surrounding the potentially negative effect of health care's high
cost this complex point is necessary. Lack of sufficient financial
resources is not the exclusive root of the problem: The United States spends more on healthcare than any country in the world (23), yet
McGlynn et al estimate that Americans receive only about half the care
recommended for common conditions (24).
The emergence of advanced telecommunications and information
management technologies as tools for enhancing the delivery of
healthcare information and services at a distance--telehealth--has been
therefore touted as one solution to the problems of both access to
healthcare and the cost of that access. In the 1990s, many land
line-based consultative telehealth networks were initiated and
successfully provided access to specialty services prior to the
widespread use of the Internet. However, other than prison systems where
the high cost of escorted prisoner transport was avoided, few systems
exhibited bottom line viability without grant or governmental subsidy.
In addition, even when patients and clinicians accepted the technology
and could afford to initiate it, the high cost of equipment replacement
and maintenance, and the cost of telecommunication services were
barriers to success, as were clinician reimbursement issues and the
problem of clinician licensing across political boundaries.
Urban and Rural Access to HealthCare
Our view of healthcare embraces two perspectives, care of the
individual and heath status of the world population. From this vantage,
our view of the globalization of healthcare resonates with the
description of Amadio and Hathaway (25): Globalization is "... not
... sophisticated communication technology and infrastructure connecting
medical centers around the world. ... this ... already exists....
instead ... the monumental improvements ... that would occur for ...
millions of people ... through better access to clean drinking water,
nutritious food, and safe vaccinations.... the basic healthcare needs of
the entire world would be met. ... information ... communication
technology is ... a necessary part of a more connected world.... it
alone is not sufficient to deliver radical change."
Our view includes global access to universally accepted standards
of care and increasingly global access to new and sophisticated
healthcare diagnostic and management tools, both of which are being
advanced by the progress of globalization. However, we view as more
fundamental the need for globalization of a health promoting
socio-economic environment where fundamental health education,
screening, and prevention resources and practices are standardized and
universally accessible but grafted onto local regional, ethnic,
cultural, and religious traditions (Figure 1). Further, while we believe
that the information sharing and distributing capabilities of
"telehealth" technologies are extremely valuable for
accomplishing these goals, we recognize that at this time only a small
portion of the world's population can read and write and therefore
access that information, even if the technological infrastructure were
instantly to be made universal (26). As von Lubitz et al (27) point out,
"... over 83% of the world's population appears to have either
limited or no direct ... accessing [of] the wealth of health related
information available on the Net." Dramatic international efforts
in education and technology access will be necessary to overcome this
deficiency, especially for the Third World and for the
socio-economically disadvantaged of the First World.
We also believe that the barriers to healthcare access and global
health are not purely technical or educational. We believe that more
fundamental barriers are to be found in the policy, legal, labor,
economic, and governmental issues that must be addressed if any of the
potentially beneficial aspects of globalization of healthcare are to be
achieved (Figure 2).
The Business of Tele-HealthCare
Historically, the health care sector has invested far less in
information technology and its development than have other major sectors
of the business economy (28). However, even if that fact were to change,
simply investing in the physical deployment of technology that can
create connectivity and access, disseminate information and best
practices standards, and overcome geographic barriers is neither a
local, regional, national, or global panacea. Government, insurance
payers, providers, hospital systems, policy makers, credentialing
organizations, and ultimately consumers will determine whether and how
quickly these technologies will be employed and their benefits realized
(25,29). Governments must align tax, tort, and insurance laws while
ensuring safety nets, reconsidering entitlement programs, and realigning
incentives (29). Policy makers and credentialing bodies must recognize
the intensely personal and thus extremely variable nature of healthcare
purchase decisions (23). W.H.First issued a fundamental challenge to all
segments of the global healthcare industry when he pointed out that we
have never fostered the kind of competition in the healthcare economy
that has led to success in other industries (29).
Local Medical Practices, Local Traditions, and Alternative
HealthCare
According to the World Health Organization, more than 80% of the
world population uses traditional medicine (30), medicine that is
largely based on cultural practices rather than the scientific
principals and paradigms that are the foundation of specialty medicine.
Solomons suggests that the cultural homogenization implied by
globalization is a threat to traditional medicine, and that the
persistent use use of traditional medicine may be a symbol of resistance
to that homogenization (31). Aggressive "bioprospecting" by
pharmaceutical companies emphasizes their perception of the value of
alternative/traditional medicine by indicating their belief that these
practices point to active natural principles whose efficacy is
underscored by their persistent successful use over decades and even
centuries (30).
Telehealth technologies are not a replacement for in-person health
care, but rather a method for supplementing it and expanding the range
of locally available services. This fact forms the base of the business
plan for using telehealth technologies in rural communities separated
from specialty care by only the inconvenience and expense of a few hours
travel. It is the rationale for using the technology to import the
services so that the patient is not inconvenienced and the local
community shares in the economic benefit. It allows the traditionally
more comfortable encounter between the patient and the local primary
care physician to be more effective while still remaining local.
To the extent that healthcare is globalized through the use of
telehealth technologies, cultures of vastly differing technological
sophistication will be brought together, even if only for a brief
medical encounter. Why should we think that the sense of security
derived from maintaining one's confidence in the local, available
provider will be any less important--in fact, it is likely that it will
be more important. It has been suggested that by applying technology to
healthcare, especially in less sophisticated cultures, the human
dimension of care will be undermined (8). The challenge for anyone
attempting to reap the potential benefits of telehealth-facilitated
globalization of healthcare will be to take the time to address local
issues, to integrate and preserve the positive aspects of the local
system of care, and to maintain and learn from the cultural knowledge
that forms the core of the successful practice of traditional medicine
(Figures 1 and 2).
Information Access and Infrastructure, Tele-Practice and the
Internet
The Internet currently provides continuous access to health
information for millions around the world. It has the potential for
providing universal access. Increasingly, consumer access to health
information ceases to be an issue. This fact already has changed, and
will continue to change, the role of healthcare providers, patients, and
the families of patients. Previously, clinicians were the custodians and
exclusive source of both health information and the knowledge,
experience, and wisdom concerning how to use that information. Now, the
role of providers has expanded to include that of adviser about the use,
specific relevance, and applicability of freely available information in
individual circumstances. Patients are increasingly taking ownership of
their own health records and searching for, acquiring, and using
available information to participate actively in their own medical
management. Family and other support persons are joining in (25, 32). By
connecting "each-to-all" (33), "all-to-each", and
"all-to-all", the emergence of the Internet was a transforming
event beyond that of the telephone that connected one to one, or
broadcast/cable that connected one to many.
Information access is an important result of Internet deployment
and access, but true global telehealth will also involve
patient-clinician interactions and clinician-clinician consultations.
These are the direct practice of telehealth/telemedicine. Many examples
of these local, regional, and international medical tele-practices exist
today. Their on-going experience contributes valuable lessons concerning
operational imperatives and pitfalls, including topics such as
scheduling, credentialing, record keeping, privacy, and regulatory
compliance. Their universal experience is that smooth operation requires
procedural standardization, staff training and regular retraining, and
administrative buy-in to a shared vision and shared goals. However,
These essentially human and local operational topics are intertwined
with infrastructure issues that are very pertinent to globalized
telehealth.
Successful telehealth practices, including home telehealth, whether
"live" or "store-and-forward", will require the
bi-directional transmission of large multi-media files. For example,
large data files must flow from the home (monitoring) or the rural site
(specialty consultation) in order to supply the supervising or
consulting provider with the information needed to make management
decisions and recommendations. Further, large data files must flow from
the provider/consultant to the rural site/home when live video
interaction is necessary and/or when instructional material must be sent
in order to implement recommendations or demonstrate techniques. When
the exchange can be asynchronous, bandwidth limitations need not be
critical if sufficient time is available for transmission. When the
exchange must be synchronous, and when time is a critical factor, global
telehealth is completely dependent on the least developed infrastructure
of the participants.
Standardization: Technical and Clinical
Y.Lan's recent review (34) of these issues from the
perspective of global business applications is applicable to telehealth.
He points out that while data transmission speeds are adequate for
operations such as e-mail, real-time delivery of large-sized files is
unreliable. Network bandwidth availability is a critical part of any
global telehealth information systems development strategy, and network
bandwidth is dependent on the lowest level of information and
communication technology adopted by any one of the participating
nations. Further, congruent policies and practices must also be in place
for privacy, security, authentication, authorization, and recovery. The
technologies to enable these policies and practices, such as firewall,
anti-virus, encryption, and biometrics must also be congruent and
compatible. Technical standardization is essential.
Even when these technical issues are resolved, and even when the
participants in the clinical encounter speak the same language, clinical
barriers to data-sharing for globalized healthcare facilitation through
telehealth practices arise because international standardization of many
basic medical infrastructure issues has not been achieved, including the
basic language of medicine (25). For example, while much of the world
uses the World Health Organization's 10th Revision of the
International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10-CM), the United States
still employs ICD-9-CM, delaying the necessary changeover because of
implementation costs and because of the anticipated disruption business
of business processes.
Discussion and Conclusions
When the public Internet appeared on the scene it was regarded by
many as a sophisticated special interest toy of computer aficionados.
However, its transformational power in business, education, and
communication rapidly became evident as was demonstrated by the number
of organizations and individuals that came on line, creating Web sites
with increasing increasingly rich content. As these sites grew in
content, demand for access grew. As these sites grew in the complexity
of their content, demand for transmission speed grew. Initial patience
with the time required to download files disappeared as users became
more dependent upon the content of those files and as they grew to
understand the power of that conent in the workplace, the school, and
the home. As a result, an important measure of the extent to which
individuals, communities, businesses, and governments are seen as
sophisticated participants in the modern world around them has become
the degree to which they are "wired" and the degree to which
they use that wired status to conduct their business. This perception
persists and is now even more prevalent.
While use of the Internet was growing, the power of hard-wired
video was being used to create a resurgence of telemedical activity.
Concentration of medical specialists in urban areas had reduced rural
access to specialty healthcare services. Many visionaries saw advanced
telecommunications as an ideal way to assist in the reduction of this
imbalance. Both small and ambitiously large telehealth projects arose
across the nation and around the world. So long as their objectives
remained focused, these projects enjoyed considerable success. However,
they were generally funded as pilots by government or grants. Although
clinically successful, they usually were not incorporated into the
business structure of healthcare in a manner allowing them to be
sustained when subsidies were exhausted. The cost of telecommunication
lines, system maintenance, and equipment upgrade overwhelmed the small
rural facilities that were already in financial stress. Reimbursement
regulations began to adjust insofar as clinician payment was concerned,
but not in terms of facility support. Sustainable prison and veteran
telehealth programs stood out as exceptions, largely because of the
tremendous transportation savings that were realized.
As these developments converged, the power of the Internet, World
Wide Web, and wireless communication changed telehealth scenarios.
Previous telehealth systems had demonstrated the feasibility of
healthcare at a distance and its acceptability to both patients and
clinicians. The new telecommunication technologies reduced system costs,
and through their use in the commercial world began to show the way for
incorporating telehealth into the business of healthcare. It became
understood that telehealth technologies are not tools to replace
previous systems. Instead, they are tools to enhance the efficiency of
those previous systems on the one hand, and on the other hand enable us
to accomplish tasks that were previously inconceivable without advanced
telecommunication technologies.
The possibility of reaching across geo-political, socio-economic,
and other barriers to deliver healthcare services offers a tool for
making healthcare services more universally available without the cost
of replicating and maintaining them in numberless locations. Telehealth
offers a tool to continue the essentially local and personal nature of
individual healthcare delivery while expanding the scope and depth of
what is available locally, minimizing the cost of that service
expansion. Telehealth also offers a tool for standardizing healthcare
service approaches and delivery systems where those standards can be
proven to improve outcomes, reduce long-term morbidity, reduce cost, and
reduce medical errors. Once telehealth is implemented across a wired or
wireless space, distance ceases to be an issue and the potential for
global impact is obvious.
However, this potential for global impact exposes numerous barriers
and problems. Ours is not an homogeneous world. Every language,
socio-economic, cultural, and technological difference must be taken
into account. For example, because of deficiencies of educational
opportunity and differences in personal wealth/poverty, only a very
small portion of the world population has realistic access to advanced
telecommunications and telehealth services today. That telehealth could
have an impact globally is clear, but as with many aspects of
globalization, that impact risks widening the gap between residents of
developed and under-developed countries. Telehealth already requires a
re-thinking of the business parameters of local, regional, and national
healthcare. If it is to re-design the business parameters of global
healthcare telehealth will require a similar re-thinking of issues, but
on a more massive scale.
The National Rural Health Association: Telemedicine: "... is a
... vehicle to connect patients in rural areas to urban medical centers
and provide access to a wide range of clinical services ... to
underserved rural and urban populations.... has the potential to
ameliorate geographical and socio-economic disparities in access to
medical expertise and knowledge." (35) "... evidence suggests
that telemedicine is an effective and efficient means of delivering a
broad spectrum of health services to medically underserved ...
communities."(36) Tele-networking may in fact be the only
economically viable and sustainable way to provide healthcare resources
to whomever is in need wherever that need exists because healthcare
needs are universal and ubiquitous and because it is inconceivable that
any nation can afford to provide healthcare resources in close proximity
to every need.
Participation in the economic benefits of globalization requires
that one of the essential tools facilitating globalization, advanced
telecommunication technologies, be brought to bear on individual and
global health. Robust economies in communities, regions, and nations are
driven by workers whose reliability depends upon both personal health
and the health of their families. Absence from work because of personal
health or seeking healthcare for family members undermines the economy.
"Whether telemedicine/telehealth will affect physician
workforce needs globally ... cannot be fully determined until a way is
found around the barriers currently inhibiting ..." its expansion
(19). However, when that way is found, the time will be upon us when
national identity among the health professions will be obsolete.
To the extent that telehealth technologies can transport specialty
services to regions and populations where they are currently
unavailable, and to the extent that socio-economic barriers to that
transport are overcome, telehealth service delivery will grow of its own
accord based on locally relevant business models.
Today's global realities require that global telehealth be
approached incrementally. We must leverage local healthcare systems and
practices to accomplish immediately with global telehealth what is
possible now (Figure 1). Simultaneously, energy must be focused upon the
local, national, and international barriers that must be overcome before
the larger potential advantage of telehealth can be realized (Figure 2).
There will be local practices and advantages that are best left local
(Figure 1) because even though telehealth will allow us to move toward
globally homogenized healthcare, that goal is probably neither
completely feasible, desirable, nor optimal.
A realistic short term view for the role of telehealth in
globalization might be to state that to the extent that information
sharing can focus the expenditure of available health resources to
standardize public health measures such as sanitation, immunization,
maternal and infant health, industrial safety, etc it should be
undertaken immediately. Where necessary, developed nations should
facilitate progress toward these goals in undeveloped nations.
Realizing the remaining potential for telehealth requires
overcoming the geo-political, educational, and socio-economic barriers
that grow from existing global imbalances between developed and
under-developed countries. These imbalances are relevant not only to
telehealth but to the entire vision for globalization. Health needs can
help stimulate efforts to remove these barriers, Global health needs
will not be met, with or without telehealth technologies, until these
barriers are overcome.
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
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Max E. Stachura, MD and
Elena V. Khashanshina, MD, PhD
Center for Telehealth
Medical College of Georgia
Augusta, Georgia, USA