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Telemedicine
ESA road map for telemedicine
 
22 June 2004
How can space improve telemedicine and what do users need? These are some of the questions that will be discussed by telemedicine experts and policy makers at the Telemedicine via Satellite: the ESA Road Map Symposium, on 5 July at ESA’s Space Research Institute, ESRIN in Italy.
 
Much has been done since the first symposium on Telemedicine via Satellite in the Information Society in May 2003. As a first step a multidisciplinary and multinational working group of medical professionals was set up to define the needs of eHealth and telemedicine, and to discuss the telecommunication services that such a system requires. Throughout its work the group has been carefully monitored to ensure that its aims concord with the objectives of the European Commission and the World Health Organisation, as well as other international bodies promoting eHealth and telemedicine.  
 
To facilitate its task, the group was divided into eight thematic subgroups. Each of these was asked to analyse the needs and opportunities for using information and communications technology in a specific area of health care, and then to identify the specific role that satellite communications can play. The areas examined were:
  • interconnectivity for healthcare services: information exchange among healthcare centres and issues related to electronic health records
  • service for citizens: recent and future changes in the attitude of Europe’s citizens towards information and communications technologies for health care
  • healthcare at home: the control and treatment of a patients’ medical conditions within their own homes and communities
  • mobility: ensuring high standards of healthcare during travel, in areas that are difficult to reach and also for access to healthcare on transport systems such as planes, ships or ambulances
  • management of trauma, emergencies and disasters: provision of healthcare in the aftermath of natural or industrial disasters
  • early warning of environmental health risks: preventing or limiting the spread of diseases related to climatic or environmental changes
  • ehealth education: using information and communication technology to improve medical training among the medical profession as well as knowledge of health care among citizens
  • vision for eHealth and telemedicine via satellite: the future of health care and the shift from disease management to health preservation

 
 
Change of direction

The working group was set up under the umbrella of ESA’s programme for telemedicine via satellite, a new programme that marks a shift in ESA’s approach to telemedicine. Although much valuable work has been done since the launch of ESA’s first telemedicine project in 1996, in 2003 ESA decided to complement initiatives mainly driven by industry and service operators, with those driven by demand.

Through its experience, ESA has learnt that involving end users and associated stakeholders from the very beginning can help to reduce the gap between the end of a pilot project and the beginning of a fully-fledged service. For this reason, at the end of the last symposium it was agreed to establish a multidisciplinary working group to include members of the medical profession.

The issues to be presented on 5 July should provoke lively debates. By listening to the views of those with a stake in improving health care ESA hopes to ensure that the medical profession makes the best use of the many services offered by telecommunication satellites to improve the health of Europe’s citizens.

For more information on the Telemedicine via Satellite Symposium please contact:

ESA, Paris: Dominique Detain +33 1 53697726
ESTEC, Noordwijk: Francesco Feliciani +31 (0)71 5654109
ESRIN, Frascati: Simonetta Cheli +39 06 94180350
 
 
Satellite communications, being accessible from virtually any site and quickly adaptable to specific communications needs, has great potential for the development of telemedicine.
 
 
From the mid 1990s’, a number of activities have been initiated in Europe by national and international organisations with the purpose of demonstrating and promoting the use of satcom in the field of telemedicine.
 
 
Through such projects it has been possible to demonstrate the technical feasibility of several satellite based telemedicine systems, and to raise awareness among potential users.
 
 
Use of satellite based ICT for telemedicine is progressing from an exploratory phase towards a more operational profile, in which integration into existing healthcare systems and quick attainment of self-sustainability is essential.
 
 
Bringing together ICT specialists and health professionals, this Symposium aims to review the current status of satellite-based telemedicine services and technologies and to converge on common requirements of direct relevance for future telemedicine services via satellite. During the two-day event, guidelines for defining future programmatic actions for the further development and promotion of telemedicine via satellite will also be identified.
 
 
The following themes of Telemedicine via satellite will be covered during the Symposium, each with a dedicated Working Group:

  • Telemedicine for elderly people
  • Telemedicine for disaster relief and emergency applications
  • Telemedicine for hospitals in remote areas
  • Teleconsulting, second opinion and regulatory aspects
  • Telemedicine, medical education and clinical research
  • Telemedicine technology development in satcom
  • Economical impacts of telemedicine.
A comprehensive Programme for the Symposium will be available end of February 2003.
 
 
 


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