| Literature DB >> 14680514 |
P A Jennett1, L Affleck Hall, D Hailey, A Ohinmaa, C Anderson, R Thomas, B Young, D Lorenzetti, R E Scott.
Abstract
We reviewed the socio-economic impact of telehealth, focusing on nine main areas: paediatrics, geriatrics, First Nations (i.e. indigenous peoples), home care, mental health, radiology, renal dialysis, rural/remote health services and rehabilitation. A systematic search led to the identification of 4646 citations or abstracts; from these, 306 sources were analysed. A central finding was that telehealth studies to date have not used socio-economic indicators consistently. However, specific telehealth applications have been shown to offer significant socio-economic benefit, to patients and families, health-care providers and the health-care system. The main benefits identified were: increased access to health services, cost-effectiveness, enhanced educational opportunities, improved health outcomes, better quality of care, better quality of life and enhanced social support. Although the review found a number of areas of socio-economic benefit, there is the continuing problem of limited generalizability.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2003 PMID: 14680514 DOI: 10.1258/135763303771005207
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Telemed Telecare ISSN: 1357-633X Impact factor: 6.184