Philips innovation Campus, showcased their IntelliSpace
Consultative Critical Care (ICCC) solution service at the Healthcare Conclave
in Bengaluru recently. The state of the art hardware and software products that
are provided as part of the solution enables clinicians connect to and monitor
multiple intensive care units from a central location.
Talking to media, Srinivas
Prasad M R, Managing Director of Philips Innovation Centre,
Bengaluru says,
“Tele medicine is the way forward. We have already made tremendous progress on
this front with the hub and spokes model. Recently have tied up with several
hospitals both in the government and private sectors. Today we have about 1,500
beds in India and did a pilot in In Karnataka, at Jadgir with partnership with
Narayana Healthcare. Following this also have a joint venture with Manipal Hospitals
in several places across India”
IntelliSpace CCC is a solution
where connectivity is absolutely essential. Therefore the biggest challenge
that needs to be overcome especially in the case of rural areas is lack of
electricity and low broadband internet penetration, he said.
Trained healthcare providers and intensive care nurses stationed
at the command center can monitor the patients in the peripheral ICUs on a 24/7
basis. This saves costs for the patients and gets best care to them, even at
remote locations.
The conclave was graced by industry stalwarts like Rajesh Batra,
CIO of Kokilaben Dhirubhai Ambani Hospital, and government officials like
Rajendra Pratap, advisor to Union Minister of Health, healthcare providers and
a few ambitious start-ups. These stalwarts highlighted how can we leverage
digital India for providing better healthcare solutions and that IoT and AI are
a powerful combination in redefining healthcare. This comes as an addition to
the breakthrough of big data in healthcare sector, where the healthcare
providers have access to better and relevant data, in turn rendering them
capable to offer better care to the healthcare seekers.
As on date our country needs additional 1.5million beds and 3 million
doctors by 2034, to be able to render effective healthcare to the ones in need.
However, according to a survey conducted by McKinsey, India has only 1.3
hospital beds per 1,000 people-significantly lower than the guideline of 3.5
beds defined by WHO (World Health Organization). The sector needs to focus on
the quality, affordability and the reach of healthcare. The only answer to
bridge the gap between the problem and the solution is innovative technology.
PIC now plans to make a significant reduction in the maternal
mortality rate, with their latest innovation-Mobile Obstetrical Monitoring
(MoM). High fetal and maternal mortality rates continue to remain one of
the major concerns in the healthcare space. The project will monitor pregnant
women for early high risk identification via a new telehealth solution. This
will enhance the performance of India’s Frontline Health Workersas they are the
first point of contact with the healthcare system in the developing areas,
allowing them to save many lives. The project will be a great step towards
improved healthcare for the newborn and the mothers.
While cardiovascular diseases have quadrupled in the last 40
years, 50% of the affected patients arrive too late for appropriate treatment.
If the patient receives treatment within one hour of the attack- called ‘the
golden hour’, possibilities of saving his/her life increase manifold. Philips
Innovation Campus has developed the chest pain clinics to answer the problem.
The Chest Pain Clinics are aimed at enabling small hospitals
and nursing homes to provide timely and quality, ”Emergency Cardiac Care” and
thus save lives.Each Chest Pain Clinic will be a clinic or a small healthcare
facility equipped with Philips Efficia ECG-100 systems which will wirelessly
transmit ECGs of patients in real time from the spokes(Chest Pain Clinics) to
the hub. Once a patient is confirmed as suffering from a Myocardial Infarction,
known as a Heart Attack, he/she is immediately transported via an ambulance
from the Chest Pain Clinic, for primary Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
(PCI) within the golden hour.
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