Page 10 - HA Convention 2016 [Abstracts (Day 1)]
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HOSPITAL AUTHORITY CONVENTION 2016  Symposiums

                                    S4.1  Telemedicine in Chronic Disease Management  16:15  Convention Hall C

Tuesday, 3 May                      Ethical Issues in Telemedicine

                                    Klitzman R

                                    Psychiatry Department, Columbia University, USA

                                     

                                    Telemedicine promises to aid the delivery of healthcare in many ways, but also poses a series of ethical challenges. Electronic
                                    communication is revolutionising almost every aspect of modern life, including healthcare. Yet many of these advances are
                                    only recently developing, and their full extent, impact, benefits and risks remain unclear. Telemedicine can involve giving and
                                    receiving information among multiple stakeholders, including patients, family members, physicians, nurses, researchers,
                                    hospital administrators, health departments, other government agencies, insurers, and pharmaceutical companies.  This
                                    information can be used for disease prevention, diagnosis, monitoring and treatment. But many questions arise concerning,
                                    for instance, what the specific benefits and risks may be of e-diagnosis and e-treatment in various fields – from
                                    telepsychiatry to telesurgery, teleradiology, and telepathology – all of which may make diagnosis and treatment more widely
                                    and cheaply available.  Will or should the quality or standards of care change? Electronic health records are increasingly used
                                    to monitor and assess providers and healthcare systems, but does that detract from the quality of face-to-face provider-
                                    patient interactions and care, and if so, how much, if any, is acceptable?   
                                     
                                    Health information can also cause stigma, embarrassment or discrimination, and confidentiality is thus vital.  The ease of
                                    transmission and dissemination of information means that other individuals may obtain it, posing threats.  Questions arise
                                    of how much protection is needed, and if protection is not absolute in the “real world”, what minimum standard should
                                    be established; whether whole genome and whole exome sequencing data, or other sensitive information should always
                                    be placed in electronic records and treated the same as other information there; and whether patients might not disclose
                                    important information to providers because of fears that confidentiality may be violated.  
                                     
                                    Health systems face challenges of how to manage large amounts of “big data” to make best use of it, who should have
                                    access to these data, and how much to switch to telemedicine vs. face-to-face treatment. Critical questions emerge about
                                    how patients and provides view and make decisions about these issues. This presentation will explore these quandaries and
                                    ways of addressing them.
                                     

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