Wednesday, June 06, 2012

Telemedicine: Cardiology's New Frontier?

EKG at home?   Check.

Blood pressure at home?  Check.

INR check at home?  Check.

Cholesterol blood level at home?  Check.

Maybe an echocardiogram at home, too? Check.

Hey, maybe there's something to this!

A cardiologist with an MBA has launched a telemedicine business starting with international retailer Walmart (NYSE: WMT) with the goal of providing affordable healthcare in areas underserved by providers.


Dr.Raj Shah, who runs a 37 year-old, 10-physician cardiology and internal medicine practice in Langhorne, Pennsylvania, is the founder of Telemed Ventures and CEO of Smart Care Doc. Having formed the company nearly three years ago, he opened its first telemedicine unit in Bensalem in suburban Philadelphia and another is scheduled to open in Willow Grove, Pennsylvania later this month.


* * *


The unit includes a flat screen TV and a dentist-style chair and has a set of bluetooth-enabled medical devices administered by an on site nurse including a digital stethoscope, a handheld EKG device, a finger pulse reader and a digital thermometer. A light pen camera is used to look into ears, at the throat or skin lesions. All of the readings from these devices can be transmitted to the attending physician or entered into a computer and sent to the physician in real time. Nurses also provide immunizations, minor wound care, and other services.

Patients also get a personal health record referred to by the practice as a “patient passport.” It includes continuity of care records and documents, medical problems diagnosed from their encounters with Smart Care Doc physicians, prescribed medications, allergies and appointments. In the years before he started his telemedicine business, Shah had launched a patient passport business to help patients keep track of their records


Despite Shah’s presence at Walmart, his relationship with the big box retailer is only as a tenant, so he is not tied to a partnership agreement. But he hopes to expand the practice if enough people use the service to rural areas across the country where Walmarts are located. Walmart declined to comment.
While this $59 model might work pretty well for preventative cardiology and parts of diagnostic cardiology, I'm not sure interventional cardiologists will be too happy with their door-to-balloon times.

Just sayin'.

-Wes
















2 comments:

gruntdoc said...

For the STEMI, drip and ship!

Equivalent results to emergent stent, cheaper, and the patient can get their statin and ace inhibitor filled while waiting for EMS.

Financially, Win-Win! And just what people who take their chest pain to WalMart want!

dmasud said...

Telemedicine yeah.Its another addition to modern health services. Variety of health services are there now.People are going to take Plastic surgery from Plastic Surgeon in plastic surgery Hospitals.Lets have a check www.joshbd.com