Virtual Hospital

Virtual Hospital is an international non-government organization that operates as part of Virtual Healthcare Limited. Virtual Hospital uses telemedicine to deliver medical care to the developing world. Virtual Hospital works directly with doctors and patients and seeks to ensure that the benefits of modern medicine are available to all people and that the poor are not deprived of medical treatment for want of money, or a lack of access to effective healthcare.

How Virtual Hospital Works

Virtual Hospital interconnects villages in the developing world with their main county hospitals and hospitals in the West using Telemedicine. Virtual Hospital is based on a traditional healthcare referral system where the patients’ medical information is collected by e-clinics in rural third world communities using a computer, or mobile phone and sent to a general medical practitioner (GP) based at the Virtual Hospital (Hub). The GP at the Hub then either provides a diagnosis, or refers the patient to the relevant Virtual Hospital Department where specialist consultants across the world are linked together through the Internet.

Influence on Virtual Hospital

The work of Virtual Hospital is influenced to a great extent by reports published by the World Health Organization (WHO) on Telemedicine developments,[1] American Telemedicine Association[2] and the work of Zaidi et all 2004 and Denis Gilhooly Principal Adviser in the United Nations.

According to WHO’s report on 'Telemedicine - Opportunities and Developments in Member States' : 'Information and communication technologies have great potential to address some of the challenges met both developed and developing countries in providing accessible, cost effective high quality health care services. Telemedicine uses ICTs to overcome geographical barriers and increase access to healthcare services. This is particularly beneficial for rural and underserved communities in developing countries - groups that traditionally suffer form lack of access to healthcare.'[3]

References

  1. Kay, Misha; Santos, Takane (2010). Telemedicine opportunities and developments in Member States (PDF) (Report). Global Observatory for eHealth series. 2. WHO.
  2. Grady, Bryan (October 2009). "PRACTICE GUIDELINES FOR VIDEOCONFERENCING-BASED TELEMENTAL HEALTH" (PDF). Practice guidelines for video conferencing-based telemental Health.
  3. Gilhooly, Denis (2009). Confronting the Diseases of Poverty: Creating a Digital He@lth Dynamic (PDF). American Telemedicine Association Conference. Las Vegas, USA.
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