Telecommunications bring the potential to improve both the quality of and access to health care in the remotest areas of the developing world. Telemedicine offers solutions for emergency medical assistance, long distance consultation, administration and logistics, supervision and quality assurance and education and training for health-care professionals and providers. A new addition to the successful telehealth series published by the Royal Society of Medicine Press, Telehealth in the Developing World aims to balance the relative lack of published information on successful telehealth solutions in the developing world. It is written for all e-health and telehealth proponents interested in learning about, or contributing to the implementation of, appropriate solutions for 80 per cent of the world's population.Topics featured in this book include: teledermatology in Cambodia; telepediatrics in Chechnya; telepathology in India - using digital cameras and email; HealthNet networks in Nepal; medical missions for children in Mongolia; international HIV/AIDS discussion lists; the Aga Khan Telehealth Network in Pakistan; access to mobile phones and internet in the Philippines; exchanging X-ray images in Ghana; web-based oncology registries and a virtual oncology hospital in Brazil; surgical training in the developing world; and, the iPath international email network.
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ix | |
| Foreword |
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xiii | |
| Preface |
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xv | |
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3 | (6) |
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Bridging the digital divide: Linking health and ICT policy |
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9 | (18) |
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Telemedicine in developing countries: Perspectives from the Philippines |
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27 | (7) |
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Information technology for primary health care in Brazil |
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34 | (9) |
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Community-based health workers in developing countries and the role of m-health |
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43 | (12) |
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Global e-health policy: From concept to strategy |
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55 | (13) |
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Experiences and lessons learnt from telemedicine projects supported by the IDRC |
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68 | (11) |
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Strategies to promote e-health and telemedicine activities in developing countries |
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79 | (12) |
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Telemedicine in low-resource settings: Experience with a telemedicine service for HIV/AIDS care |
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91 | (10) |
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Medical Missions for Children: A global telemedicine and teaching network |
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101 | (8) |
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Telementoring in India: Experience with endocrine surgery |
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109 | (12) |
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Teledermatology in developing countries |
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121 | (14) |
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Cross-cultural telemedicine via email: Experience in Cambodia and the USA |
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135 | (14) |
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Telepathology and telecytology in developing countries |
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149 | (7) |
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Internet-based store-and-forward telemedicine for subspecialty consultations in the Pacific region |
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156 | (14) |
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Telehealth support for a global network of Italian hospitals |
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170 | (12) |
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182 | (11) |
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Telemedical support for surgeons in Ecuador |
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193 | (10) |
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A low-cost international e-referral network |
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203 | (9) |
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Telehealth in China: Opportunities and challenges |
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212 | (10) |
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Telemedicine in South Africa |
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222 | (10) |
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Telemedicine in sub-Saharan Africa |
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232 | (10) |
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Telehealth for mountainous and remote areas of northern Pakistan |
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242 | (10) |
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Teleneurology: Past, present and future |
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252 | (10) |
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Telepaediatric support for a field hospital in Chechnya |
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262 | (11) |
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Web-based paediatric oncology information and registries: An international perspective |
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273 | (14) |
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E-health in international networks: New opportunities for collaboration |
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287 | (12) |
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The future use of telehealth in the developing world |
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299 | (10) |
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| Index |
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309 | |
Richard Wootton, Director, Scottish Centre for Telehealth, UK; Honorary Professor, University of Queensland, Australia; Honorary Professor, University of Aberdeen, UKNivritti G Patil, Professor of Surgery and Assistant Dean (Education & Student Affairs), Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine, the University of Hong Kong, HKSAR, ChinaRichard E Scott, Associate Professor at the Global e-Health Research and Training Program, Health Innovation and Information Technology Centre (HiiTeC), and Department of Community Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary, CanadaKendall Ho, Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine and Director, eHealth Strategy Office, Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Canada