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The Leading Source for Global News and Information from the evolving Grid ecosystem,
including Grid, SOA, Virtualization, Storage, Networking and Service-Oriented IT |
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May 5, 2008
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Doctors are increasingly using ICT to improve the quality of care they
provide to patients, a sign that EU investment into related research is
yielding results.
A European Commission survey of information
and communication technologies (ICT) take up by the medical profession
found that 87 percent of Europe's general practitioners are using a computer,
and just under half are using a broadband connection. The use of
electronic services in health care, known as e-Health, is also making
administration more efficient and cutting down on patient waiting
times, according to the survey of doctors.
“Europe is starting
to reap the benefits of broadband connections in the e-health sector,"
said Viviane Reding, EU Commissioner for Information Society and Media.
“This diagnosis also shows that it is now time to use these electronic
services much more widely as they have the potential to bring
extraordinary benefits to all patients, all over Europe.”
The
survey shows that about 70 percent of European doctors use the internet and
66 percent use computers for consultations. However, technology for monitoring
patients remotely, called telemonitoring, is only used by doctors in
Sweden, the Netherlands and Iceland and even in those countries it is
only provided sparingly.
Administrative patient data is
electronically stored in 80 percent of general practices, while 92 percent of these
also electronically store medical data on diagnoses and medication.
About 35 percent electronically store radiological images. About 40 percent of
European doctors often transfer data electronically with laboratories,
but only 10 percent to other health centres.
Moreover, using ICT to
share data among general practitioners in other member states is rare,
with only 1 percent saying they exchange data across borders.
But
European researchers are providing the techniques to help more doctors
incorporate ICT as part of their provision of patient health care.
They
are developing technologies that could lead to significant advances for
both doctors and the patients they treat, as can be demonstrated by the
EU-funded projects covered so far by ICT Results. Here is a selection
of some of those results.
Leveraging Grids for Telemonitoring
For
example, the Akogrimo project team is developing the potential of
telemonitoring by developing a grid to bring diagnostic tools out of
hospitals and into the field. The results of their work will
potentially give paramedics and other mobile response units access to
powerful tools previously beyond their grasp.
The Akogrimo
project was designed to link not only organisations but also
individuals, often using mobile devices. The grid can accommodate
virtual organisations that are set up in advance for day-to-day tasks
and also those that are created at very short notice, such as in a
crisis situation.
Reducing Complications
Along similar lines,
the PalCom project focused on reducing complications associated with
technology. The researchers’ aim was to use so-called "palpable" computing -- pervasive computer technology that is also tangible and
comprehensible to its users.
Such technology allows for a quick
fix of communications breakdowns. The EU researchers behind the project
are now applying the technology to help women through pregnancies and
to improve the treatment of hip-replacement patients.
Another
palpable computing system they are developing is aimed at enhancing
post-surgery monitoring and will allow hip patients to leave the
hospital 24 hours after surgery, rather than the current three or four
days.
Tracking Vital Signs in Real Time
Keeping an eye on
patients after they walk out of the surgery door may seem more like
science fiction, but European doctors and technicians are perfecting a
medical support system that can track patients’ real-time vital signs,
link those to patient medical history, and, crucially, provide the
latest clinical guidelines for patient care.
Better yet, the
system can alert doctors in case a patient suffers a set back. The
system is called Saphire, after the project of the same name. Saphire
offers a range of services that combine scattered information stored
across different systems into a new, more powerful application.
Monitoring Close to the Skin
Researchers
at another EU-funded project, BIOTEX, also developed a new method of
monitoring patients in real-time. The researchers tapped into the
ongoing development of smart fabrics to create items of clothing that
can measure a wearer's body temperature, trace their heart activity,
analyse body fluids, and providing another way to continually assess of
someone's health.
“It's new and health care providers are not
used to it,” says Jean Luprano, a researcher at the Swiss Centre for
Electronics and Microtechnology who is also the project’s coordinator.
“We are not used to the information that continuous, remote monitoring
can provide -- so different to the one-off laboratory tests that are
usually taken. BIOTEX technology makes this remote monitoring possible,
but more research into the links between these indicators and disease
conditions and states will make it realistic."
Luprano expects
continuous monitoring, made possible with smart textiles, to make a
major improvement to the way doctors approach the treatment of
metabolic disorders and leisure.
Developing the Telephone for Health Care
Following
a simpler path, researchers at the Attentianet project developed a way
of using a telephone line to communicate with an assistance centre set
up for providing health care at a distance.
While such
technology is already in use for many house-bound or elderly people,
the project resulted in a system that uses broadband communications and
video telephony.
A mobile system is also used to allow tracking
of individuals. Such a device can easily be slipped into a pocket while
everyday life continues, and the person can be safe in the knowledge
that a video teleassistance center is permanently on call.
Making
the system user friendly was obviously a key concern for the
researchers, and they used a special and very simple mobile phone with
just two buttons.
Focusing on Sharing Information
Bringing
together scattered information from around the European bloc as
citizens become more mobile was addressed by the RIDE project. The
research team sought to chart a road map for e-health interoperability
that would eventually hook up the EU’s health information systems in a
seamless Web.
The ideal is that in the future, Europeans will be
able to go to any member state and not sense any difference in the
quality of health care they receive. Doctors and health bodies will be
able to access information on foreign patients just as easily as they
do for local ones, and patient records will be accessible at any time
from anywhere not only for professionals with the necessary access
right but also for the patients themselves.
A New Theatre for ICT
General
practitioners and administrators are not the only ones who could
benefit from ICT. Results from the OrthoSim project look set to
benefits orthopaedic surgeons by producing a platform to reduce the
risk of post-operative complications.
The platform uses computer
software to create anatomical and implant simulations, which can
reliably model the interface between an artificial implant and the
living tissue, giving surgeons vital information before the operation
has even begun.
"With this service, a surgeon or implant
engineer can effectively call on the expertise of the best people in
any field of orthopaedic surgery, where biomechanical simulation can
offer new insights for patient care," says Dr. Ing. Ruben Lafuente,
technical manager of the Spanish IT consulting firm Adapting S.L. and
project coordinator.
Stacking the Odds in Favor of Patients
Improving
the odds for patients is clearly a priority of ICT medical research.
The CLINICIP project looked at boosting the odds for those with the
odds stacked against them -- patients in intensive care units (ICUs).
For
such patients, treating high glucose levels can be a real challenge,
and so the project set about developing a new automated delivery
system. Nurses still have to draw blood, which is analysed in the
traditional way, but then the new system takes charge, calculating how
much insulin is needed and automatically administering it.
Think and it Will Happen
European
researchers have also turned their attention to improving the lives of
the 2.5 million or so people worldwide who are wheelchair bound because
of spinal injuries.
About half of these people are quadriplegic,
paralyzed from the neck down. The MAIA project aimed to help these
people regain some independence by producing a new type of
non-intrusive brain-computer interface, or BCI.
Using electrical
signals emitted by the brain and picked up by electrodes attached to
the user’s scalp, the system allows people to operate devices and
perform tasks that previously they could only dream of.
So
far, the team has carried out a series of successful trials in which
users have been able to manoeuvre a wheelchair around obstacles and
people using brainpower alone.
Providing for the Future of Health Care
Except
for OrthSim, all of the research projects mentioned above received
funding from the EU's Sixth Framework Programme. OrthoSim was funded
under the EU's eTEN program for market validation and implementation.
Between
the early 1990s and 2004, EU research funding has supported e-health to
the tune of over €500 million, with total investment due to
co-financing adding up to about twice that amount. All this has helped
to create a new e-health industry with an estimated turnover of €11
billion, according to the commission. By 2010, estimates suggest that
up to 5 percent of health budgets will be invested in e-health systems and
services.
Current initiatives stem from the action plan adopted
by the Commission In 2004 to develop the use of ICT in the health
sector. As a result, all member states put in place strategies to
accelerate e-health deployment (www.ehealth-era.org). E-health is also
targeted as part of the lead market initiative for innovation launched
by the commission in 2008.
The current European Commission
survey, published on 25 April, takes the pulse of e-health in Europe.
The survey collected responses to questions from about 7,000 general
practitioners.
It found that a majority of them agree that ICT
improves the quality of health care services that they provide. Doctors
not using ICT cite a lack of training and technical support as major
barriers. To spread e-health, they ask for more ICT in medical
education, more training and better electronic networking among
healthcare practitioners wanting to share clinical information.
EU-funded
research is addressing those demands. In addition to providing
technologies already in use by the medical profession, ongoing
EU-funded research is currently preparing technologies that doctors
will be able to take advantage of in five or so years time.
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Source: ICT Results