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April 7, 2003
Markle Funds Telemedecine Center Launching in Rural Cambodia
Top U.S. Medical Specialists Offer their Guidance to
Poor Villagers at a Model High-Tech Web-linked Clinic
Banlung, Ratanakiri Province, Cambodia - Today marks the opening of a telemedicine
clinic that brings the specialized skills of doctors at Harvard Medical
School-affiliated teaching hospitals to one of the most isolated and
medically-underserved areas of Cambodia and the region. The clinic is aimed at
serving as a model for how information and communication technologies can be
harnessed to improve the quality of health and life in the developing world.
The Ratanakiri telemedicine clinic is a joint project of the Markle Foundation,
American Assistance for Cambodia, Partners Telemedicine, and the Sihanouk Hospital
Center of Hope. Shin Satellite of Thailand has contributed a dedicated high-speed
Internet satellite link to the project.
Cambodian doctors and nurses will use this link to share descriptions of
patient symptoms, digital photos, ultrasound readings, and X-rays with Harvard
specialists through Partners Telemedicine in Boston, who will provide real-time
diagnostic guidance and suggested treatments. Patients requiring more sophisticated
equipment and supplies than those available at the clinic will be transferred
to the charity Sihanouk Hospital Center of Hope, which is the local support
institution for this project, and other specialized medical centers in Phnom-Penh.
Most patients, however, will be treated on-site.
Cambodia's health problems are among the direst in Asia, according to the World
Health Organization. Major health threats include trauma, malaria, tuberculosis,
AIDS, hepatitis B and mine accidents. Since most Cambodians live in rural areas
and the country also lacks specialized physicians, the population is deprived of
adequate medical attention, a situation that also exists in many other developing
countries. The clinic in Ratanakiri, based at its only referral hospital, will
leverage the skills of health care providers in both Cambodia and the United
States.
"Telemedicine can overcome the barriers of distance and time to bring
crucial information to the point of care," says Zoë Baird, president
of the Markle Foundation, which is funding this project. "It holds great
potential to magnify the power of knowledge to save lives, particularly in the
areas of greatest need."
Baird noted that Markle supports the Ratanakiri telemedicine clinic because
it hopes to improve the health of more than a thousand Cambodians and at the
same time develop a model for technologically-based health care that can be
replicated to serve the poor in remote areas anywhere.
In the coming months the Markle Foundation and its partners will measure the
clinic's impact on health and refine mechanisms for its long-term sustainability.
About the Markle Foundation
Emerging information and communication technologies possess enormous potential
to improve people's lives. The Markle Foundation works to realize this potential
and to accelerate the use of these technologies to address critical public needs.
The foundation focuses its work in the program areas of Policy for a Networked
Society and Healthcare. We are currently
reviewing our program in Interactive Media for Children.
About American Assistance for Cambodia
American Assistance for Cambodia was established in 1993 by Bernard Krisher, a
former Newsweek Tokyo bureau chief who covered Cambodia in the 60s and has been
engaged over the past decade in volunteer activities targeted on its reconstruction
and rehabilitation. AAfC's projects include the establishment of the charity
Sihanouk Hospital Center of Hope and the construction of 250 solar-paneled/computer
equipped primary rural schools.
About Partners Telemedicine
Partners Telemedicine is an arm of the Partners HealthCare System, a non-profit
integrated health care delivery system founded by Brigham and Women's Hospital
and Massachusetts General Hospital, both teaching affiliates of Harvard Medical
School. Partners Telemedicine was established in 1995 and has provided more than
10,000 specialty consultations, held 7,000 educational videoconferences and n
umerous multimedia productions streamed via the Internet. Harvard specialists,
through the Partners Telemedicine link, are volunteering their time and expertise
to the Ratanakiri telemedicine clinic as well as to another remote telemedicine
link in Cambodia Preah Vihear province.
About the Sihanouk Hospital Center of Hope
The Sihanouk Hospital Center of Hope is a privately funded charity hospital
staffed and managed by HOPE worldwide, a United Nations recognized NGO. The
hospital has made a six-year investment in developing the skills of a Cambodian
staff of 36 doctors and 75 nurses, who provide medical care for 300 patients
daily. A small team of international volunteer doctors and surgeons works
alongside national health leaders to treat 60,000 patients every year, and,
since 2001, has provided the local link between the rural telemedicine project
and international partners on a volunteer basis.
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