Telemedicine deployments within NATO military forces: a data analysis of current and projected capabilities

DM Lam, RK Poropatich - Telemedicine and e-Health, 2008 - liebertpub.com
Telemedicine and e-Health, 2008liebertpub.com
Since the creation of the NATO Telemedicine Expert Panel (now renamed the TMED Expert
Team) in 2000, when few nations had deployed telemedicine systems to support military
field operations, this group has been encouraging the nations to deploy telemedicine
(TMED) in support of their forces, and to write the use of TMED into NATO doctrine. This has
been a relatively successful effort, and TMED is increasingly being used within the military
medical structures of some NATO and Partnership for Peace nations to provide medical care …
Since the creation of the NATO Telemedicine Expert Panel (now renamed the TMED Expert Team) in 2000, when few nations had deployed telemedicine systems to support military field operations, this group has been encouraging the nations to deploy telemedicine (TMED) in support of their forces, and to write the use of TMED into NATO doctrine. This has been a relatively successful effort, and TMED is increasingly being used within the military medical structures of some NATO and Partnership for Peace nations to provide medical care to deployed military personnel. We report the results of a multinational survey of current and projected availability of various telemedicine modalities within the NATO medical services that are participating in the work of the TMED expert team (ET). Though only a “snapshot in time,” and not representing all NATO nations, this is the first attempt to identify both current and planned TMED utilization within the multinational military medical community. Participating nations report that communication systems now in place at the lowest levels of medical support increasingly enable the routine use of Web-based teleconsultation modalities. Teleradiology is now being seen as the de facto standard for imaging support. While a number of nations report they have deployed capabilities for obtaining clinical consultations at a distance, most responding nations do not have a formal organizational structure to control and manage remote consultation and rely on informal clinical relationships (e.g., requesting consults from the deployed clinician’s home hospital or from friends). Military electronic health records are in use by only a minority of nations and fewer still are capable of civilian interface. Less common TMED capabilities (e.g., tele-microbiology, tele-pathology, tele-medical maintenance) are being increasingly used, but are still rarely deployed. As a result of the findings of this survey, specific recommendations for expanding the use of TMED in the NATO multinational medical setting have been made to appropriate NATO bodies.
Mary Ann Liebert
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