Our teleICU services and its need in today’s times to bridge the gap between healthcare centres not having proper intensive care specialists and its services to treat critical care patients with the help of networking and high end software integration of hospitals to our command centres.
TeleICU, also known as eICU, is the diagnosis and treatment of the most critical hospital patients by a remote intensivist using technology like videoconferencing. It makes it possible for hospitals to have access to critical care specialists in the ICU, Emergency Room or Med/Surg floors and be connected face-to-face in minutes.
When an emergency occurs in the ICU, the patient care team can request a consult (similar to paging a doctor who may be elsewhere in the hospital.) Tele Intensivists can run codes, talk to the care team through procedures, as well as speak directly to patients and/or their families to help with difficult care decisions.
There is a huge shortage of Intensivists and using a teleICU platform can address that shortage. Furthermore, utilizing a teleICU can help hospitals optimally staff their ICUs and optimize resource utilization while ensuring their patients have the highest quality of care.
At Span Critical Care, our trained critical care personnel are connected to hospital ICUs via teleICU. Command centre-based specialists oversee the management of patients. Our team, which is expanding quickly, operates out of our command center in Ahmedabad and currently provides services to 11 hospitals located across Gujarat. We work closely with the bed side team and incorporate algorithmic approaches and best in class care delivery mechanisms allowing medical personnel utilizing our solution to deliver the highest quality care to their ICU patients. Our highly trained clinicians enable protocolized, error free and efficient care. We have been working with all of our partner hospitals to help them tide over the COVID-19 crisis and keep their staff safe while continuing to ensure that their patients receive the highest quality care.
There is a vast gap in quality healthcare expertise between rural and urban areas. Typically, over 70% of India’s population resides in rural and semi-urban areas; thereby creating a vast demand for care of critically ill patients in these areas. To make matters worse, the number of Intensivists in these areas is deficient.
Today, we do witness a reasonable amount of healthcare expansion up to semi-urban areas with small hospitals growing, but unfortunately, there is a shortage of specialist doctors who treat critically ill patients. Here, technology is used as an enabler to connect, monitor, and treat patients in remote locations, increasing doctor’s efficiency, minimizing patient movements, and their financial constraints.
Tele- ICU has t h e potential to link all semi-urban/urban hospitals to Tertiary care ICUs and improve the ICU services of these remote hospitals, thus, ensuring better care and services to these communities.
Span Hospitals is connecting hospital ICUs to that of its own Tertiary Care hospitals. Similarly, it is connecting other smaller hospital ICUs to SPAN Tertiary Care Hospital ICUs in an endeavour is to provide better Intensive Care to patients by supporting the doctors at the point of care.
TeleICU, also known as eICU, is the diagnosis and treatment of the most critical hospital patients by a remote intensivist using technology like videoconferencing. It makes it possible for hospitals to have access to critical care specialists in the ICU, Emergency Room or Med/Surg floors and be connected face-to-face in minutes.
Intensivists specialize in unstable and critical patients with unpredictable medical prognoses interacting with virtually every facet of a hospital. Similar to emergency department physicians and hospitalists, intensivists are an integral component of acute care telemedicine.
TeleICU is very much like a typical ICU workflow―the difference is that the critical care physician is remote. Like other hospital ICU physicians, teleIntensivists begin each shift by rounding with the patient care team and discussing each patient, classifying them by acuity:
Those patients identified with potential problems or increased acuity due to their diagnoses and progressing illness can be escalated for a full in-depth evaluation by the teleIntensivist and on-site care teams. The goal is to proactively assess and treat patients before decompensation occurs.
When an emergency occurs in the ICU, the patient care team can request a consult (similar to paging a doctor who may be elsewhere in the hospital.) TeleIntensivists can run codes, talk the care team through procedures, as well as speak directly to patients and/or their families to help with difficult care decisions.
For many organizations, finding nighttime coverage is a challenge. Some teleIntensivists specialize as nocturnalists, and support the on-site clinical team and cover the ICU overnight.
There are several reasons that the use of teleICU is growing:
Even if a hospital has intensivists on staff, supplemental teleICU coverage can offload some of their work, allowing them to gain visibility into what is happening across the hospital and leverage their own skillset more broadly.
There are multiple use cases in hospitals for teleICU.
Remote ICU monitoring, also known as eICU, utilizes technology to monitor patient status and exchange that information in real-time to an off-site command center (or bunker) with a critical care team. ICU beds are wired so that patient information can be relayed, and alarms triggered for the onsite staff. Some remote ICU monitoring companies offer rounding by intensivists or critical care nurses, while others are only supplemental oversight. Remote ICU monitoring is more expensive than teleICU as defined above.
TeleICU is a cost-effective way to connect intensivists with the hospitals who need them to treat their most critical patients. With the shortage of intensivists nationwide, teleICU allows hospitals to provide access to these highly-trained specialists to their most critically-ill patients. Learn more about teleICU with the resources below.
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