Telehealth in the trenches: reporting back from the frontlines in rural America.

Access to appropriate healthcare services continues to be a major challenge in rural America. Telehealth technologies offer an opportunity to bridge gaps in health services in rural and remote areas and possibly support rural economic development. Lack of access to healthcare services to a growing population may create barriers to recruitment of businesses and economic growth. Several rural-oriented programs have attempted to leverage these emerging distance technologies, but success has varied despite the application of considerable federal, state governmental, and private resources. Barriers to adoption and sustainability of rural telehealth embody several factors that must be considered when planning, developing, implementing, and evaluating a rural telehealth program. New Mexico, the fifth largest state in the United States, represents many of the issues related to the potential benefits and challenges in developing a telehealth system to serve its rural communities. The Center for Telehealth at the University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center has been supported in large part by state and federal funding. Through our experiences, successes, failures, and lessons learned, we have developed approaches to overcoming barriers to adoption and sustainment of telehealth applications, including the establishment of partnerships with economic development projects in the state. This article describes these experiences and identifies and provides strategies for planning, development, implementation, and sustainment of telehealth in a rural program.

[1]  T. L. Williams,et al.  Systematic review of cost effectiveness studies of telemedicine interventions , 2002, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[2]  P A Jennett,et al.  Evaluation of a Distance Consulting Service Based on Interactive Video and Integrated Computerized Technology , 1995, Journal of telemedicine and telecare.

[3]  S. Burgiss,et al.  Telemedicine for dermatology care in rural patients. , 1997, Telemedicine journal : the official journal of the American Telemedicine Association.

[4]  R. Roine,et al.  Assessing telemedicine: a systematic review of the literature. , 2001, CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne.

[5]  S. Norton,et al.  Telemedicine in Micronesia. , 1996, Telemedicine journal : the official journal of the American Telemedicine Association.

[6]  C P Tait,et al.  Pilot study of store and forward teledermatology services in Perth, Western Australia , 1999, The Australasian journal of dermatology.

[7]  H. Gelber The experience of the Royal Children's Hospital mental health service videoconferencing project , 1998, Journal of telemedicine and telecare.

[8]  David C. Balch,et al.  Application of Technology: Telemedicine Expanding the Scope of Health Care Information , 1997, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..

[9]  Financial analysis of telemedicine in a prison system. , 1997, Telemedicine journal : the official journal of the American Telemedicine Association.

[10]  M E Stachura,et al.  Use of Telemedicine for Children With Special Health Care Needs , 2000, Pediatrics.

[11]  Cost-minimization analysis: A follow-up study of a telemedicine program. , 1998, Telemedicine journal : the official journal of the American Telemedicine Association.

[12]  D. Balch,et al.  Development of a Telemedicine and Distance Learning Network in Rural Eastern North Carolina , 1995, Journal of telemedicine and telecare.

[13]  S. Speedie,et al.  The relative cost of outpatient telemedicine services. , 1999, Telemedicine journal : the official journal of the American Telemedicine Association.

[14]  A. Robinson Video-conferencing: under-used by rural general practitioners. , 2002, Australian health review : a publication of the Australian Hospital Association.

[15]  B O Brunicardi Financial analysis of savings from telemedicine in Ohio's prison system. , 1998, Telemedicine journal : the official journal of the American Telemedicine Association.

[16]  L. Sanci,et al.  Adolescent health care: perspectives of Victorian general practitioners , 1995, The Medical journal of Australia.

[17]  R. Goins,et al.  Telemedicine, Rural Elderly, and Policy Issues , 2002, Journal of aging & social policy.

[18]  Dale Kraemer,et al.  A systematic review of the efficacy of telemedicine for making diagnostic and management decisions , 2002, Journal of telemedicine and telecare.

[19]  P. Whitten,et al.  Telemedicine for Patient Consultation: Factors affecting Use by Rural Primary-Care Physicians in Kansas , 1995, Journal of telemedicine and telecare.

[20]  D. Hailey,et al.  Systematic review of evidence for the benefits of telemedicine , 2002, Journal of telemedicine and telecare.

[21]  V. West,et al.  Profile of users of real-time interactive teleconference clinical consultations. , 2000, Archives of family medicine.

[22]  James Wallace,et al.  Clinical outcomes resulting from telemedicine interventions: a systematic review , 2001, BMC Medical Informatics Decis. Mak..