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    • Home
    • Coalition
    • About Us
    • Midcoast's Future
    • Open Access Networks
    • The Importance of Speed
    • Remote Work
    • Remote Learning
    • Telehealth
    • Agendas & Minutes
    • Governance
    • Resources
    • FAQs
    • What's in the News?

  • Home
  • Coalition
  • About Us
  • Midcoast's Future
  • Open Access Networks
  • The Importance of Speed
  • Remote Work
  • Remote Learning
  • Telehealth
  • Agendas & Minutes
  • Governance
  • Resources
  • FAQs
  • What's in the News?
Doctor holding a holographic medical network with health icons.

Telehealth

Improving our Access to Healthcare

    

There are increasing reports on the difficulty of obtaining timely healthcare. And the situation is going to get worse. The Association of American Medical Colleges predicts that the shortage of physicians may exceed 100,000 by 2032, reflecting significant shortages in primary care as well as specialty physicians. The major factor driving the demand for more physicians is the aging of Baby Boomers, impacted by the dwindling supply of physicians, one-third of whom will be older than 65 in the next decade. 


Although these shortages are expected to be felt everywhere, they will be more acutely felt in rural areas like Maine where resources are scarce and the ability to recruit specialists is challenging. At the same time, Maine has the largest percentage of residents age 65 or older (20.6%) of any State in the nation. And we know that as people age, their need for health services increases. 


That’s why “telehealth” is so important. Experts observe that telehealth holds tremendous potential for helping seniors maintain their independence and enjoy living at home longer. It offers a range of options to make healthcare easier and more accessible, particularly in remote areas like Maine subject to less than ideal weather and transportation conditions. What exactly is telehealth and how does it work? 


One example of telehealth, sometimes referred to as telemedicine, is the real-time (live) interaction between a patient and a doctor. When using this video feature, a patient is able to speak with a doctor just like in a normal office visit. It can be used to diagnose illnesses, address patient concerns, or help manage a long-term issue. Healthcare teams may also use these interactions to communicate with each other. Unfortunately, this type of interaction requires sufficient download and upload internet speed (broadband). As we have discussed in prior articles, the most effective way to secure this new service is through fiber optic to every home and business. 


Additional forms of telehealth range from tracking vital signs with remote monitoring devices, communicating easily with a nurse through a video chat or internet messaging, to receiving immediate care when you have an urgent situation and need to determine whether to summon emergency assistance. In fact, the ability to obtain this urgent assistance through the internet can avoid the expense of unnecessary 911 calls and first responder visits. 


In addition to helping seniors remain self-sufficient and safe, telehealth can be used to help families and post-operative patients. For example, new moms can interact with their doctors without having to find care for their other children so they can come into the office. Post-surgical patients can consult with their doctor, show them wounds or scars, without having to leave their homes. Telehealth is key for better care of patients with chronic illness, enabling patients to record critical health information without the need for a formal appointment. And telehealth helps to keep us all healthier by not having to expose ill people to those with compromised immune systems, dangerous germs that can exist in public places like doctors’ offices, clinics or the hospital. 


Experts claim that “telehealth and remote patient monitoring will become an essential cost effective and reliable means to expand capacity in a health care system marked with significant and persistent specialty shortages and geographic disparities.” 


One of the primary hurdles preventing us from achieving this now isn’t the lack of technology, systems or workforce on the healthcare side. It’s the lack of technology and bandwidth (translation: speed) on the patient side. Broadband internet service can get us there – bringing telehealth to the Midcoast of Maine, making our lives easier and our health care cheaper. 

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Experts claim that “telehealth and remote patient monitoring will become an essential cost effective and reliable means to expand capacity in a health care system marked with significant and persistent specialty shortages and geographic disparities.” 


A lack of broadband access is "a huge disadvantage to the people who really could stand most to benefit from it."

-Dr. Karen Saylor, Geriatrician 

Portland Press Herald, "Especially in Rural Areas, Telemedicine Patients are Left Hanging," March 14, 2021


Dr. Saylor notes that  if patients had sufficient high-speed internet access, telehealth "opens up the whole world to them," allowing patients not only to access primary care doctors but specialists in Boston or anywhere. "It would be such a game changer."


There’s growing evidence that COVID-19 may forever change how radiologists work, as many are now using digital technologies to work from home. But that wasn't possible from Juliette Zweig's home on Dodge Mountain in Rockland. After moving from Chicago, her husband, a radiologist employed to help ailing veterans, never imagined that simply getting online would prove so difficult. "We had no idea Maine was still limping along with technology from the last century," Zweig said. The lack of broadband forced Zweig and her husband to move back to Chicago. 

-Portland Press Herald, "State Lagging on Road to High-Speed Service," March 14, 2021

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