E-Medicine in India: - Hurdles and Future Prospects
E-Medicine in India: - Hurdles and Future Prospects
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The importance of right strategy planning- A specific approach for each case
For Remote Areas:Provide basic facilities
Adding E-Medicine with
other daily facilities
Remote
Area
Training
Urban
Area
Environment:Technical
Financial
Environ
-ment
Educational
Technical
- User-friendly technology like Graphical User Interface.
- Flexibility and adaptability in terms of technology.
- Involving the user from the beginning of project.
- Quality control and proper standardizations.
- Making expert systems to help users as well as patients.
Social and Political
- Active participation of society.
- Strong political will.
- Involve NGO volunteers with these activities.
Educational
- Providing continuous Medical Education (CME) for users like doctors.
- Training programs for health care professionals, patients and other persons.
Financial
- The government has limitations and so does the private sector. A combined effort
from both is needed. In private sector- software, hardware companies, computer
education institutes and corporate hospitals can play a major role in it.
Conclusion :
To witness a successful revolution in E-medicine, we need to bring these array of
activities together. If these experiments work in India over the next decade, the vast
population living in developing countries will be winners and bear the fruit of our
success.
Perhaps the slogan Health for all by 2000 which was forgotten towards the end of last
century, can still be achieved by the year 2020 by making The E-Medicine Revolution
happen in India.
(The article is a part of a paper presentation presented at an International seminar
organized at The International Institute of Professional Studies, Devi Ahilya University by
its students Gunjan Saxena and Jagannath Prakash Singh)