Medicine by e-mail

Published: 18 June 2001 y., Monday
Eight months pregnant, Beth was itchy and miserable. She had broken out in a skin rash. She wanted quick relief. Beth attached a picture of her orange-blotched skin. There in the passenger terminal, Scherger sent a message to Beth in Orange County. He prescribed medication and recommended she take a special bath. Checking his e-mail the next day from Washington, Scherger learned that Beth was feeling much better. The rash was gone. When Scherger gets back to his Irvine office in a few days, he said he plans to check up on Beth. A passionate advocate of using information technology to deliver medical care, Scherger said that e-medicine can save patients' lives, bring down costs and make high-quality care available to more people. Computers can catch dangerous drug interactions and reduce the risk of medical errors, which, he noted, "kill more people than AIDS and breast cancer each year." Scherger said e-medicine spares patients unnecessary trips to his office, allows him and patients to "avoid telephone tag" and expands the availability of medical information to physicians and patients.
Šaltinis: nando.net
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

New Release of Unisys Baggage Reconciliation System Helps Enhance Security and Efficiency of Baggage Handling at Airport

Unisys Corporation (NYSE: UIS) announced enhancements to its Baggage Reconciliation System (BRS) featuring more detailed information about baggage handling requirements for incoming flights, real-time monitoring and alerts of service level agreements (SLAs), and a mobile app to provide passengers with live updates on when and where to collect their bags. more »

Samsung gains tablet market share as Apple lead narrows

Samsung doubled its share of the tablet PC market in the last three months of 2012, research firm IDC has said. more »

Facebook boss insists site is not making a phone

Facebook boss Mark Zuckerberg has strongly denied the social network is planning to release its own phone. more »

Google TVs get gaming service via LG deal

The OnLive gaming service is to be made available to Google TV users, following a deal with electronics firm LG. One of a handful of firms making hardware for Google TV. LG's G2 series sets have Google's TV service built in. more »

Blackberry introduces free wi-fi calls on BBM

Blackberry has become the latest smartphone to offer free wi-fi calls to users via its own software. Research In Motion (RIM) has added the facility to its Blackberry Messenger (BBM) app, which already offered an alternative to text messages. more »

2012 SIIA CODiE Awards

We are delighted to announce that on 26th of January SafeNet Sentinel Cloud was awarded the SiiA 2012 Best Digital Rights Management Solution! more »

Anti-internet piracy law adopted by Spanish government

The Spanish government has approved tough new legislation which could see websites deemed to be trading in pirated material blocked within ten days. more »

Los Angeles World Airports Selects Unisys to Upgrade ID Card Reader System and Network

The Los Angeles World Airports (LAWA), which oversees airport operations for the city of Los Angeles, has awarded a contract modification to Unisys (NYSE: UIS) to upgrade its access control and alarm monitoring system, used to identify the 45,000 airport employees, contractors, police and others who work at the organization’s three airports. more »

Unisys Strengthens Enterprise-Class Cloud Offerings with New Version of Secure Private Cloud Solution

Unisys Corporation (NYSE: UIS) today announced Version 2 of its Unisys Secure Private Cloud Solution, the company’s flagship cloud solution for clients’ and cloud service providers’ data centers. more »

Fake Apple stores found in China

An American blogger has discovered three fake Apple stores operating in Kunming city, China. more »