One of the opportunities
that eHealth offers is improving communication between the health professional,
the health organization and the patient, something that many understand as a
revolution compared to how it was a few years ago. eHealth has opened a new
channel of communication between patients and health providers.
The result of this improved communication is that
it empowers the patient and offers the medic the possibility of improving
their attention thanks to new tools offered by technology, establishing a
relation that personalizes medicine and utilizes many new channels.
This new dimension to the relation between medic
and patient strengthens various aspects of their relationship, that can be
understood as authentic opportunities that eHealth highlights.
1. Direct communication at real time: the patient has free access to inquire about doubts regarding their
sickness or medication, and can even schedule an immediate or a second
diagnosis. Eliminating the barrier between space and time may be a small feat
for technology but it is a monumental feat for the user.
2. Improved assistance to chronic patients: patients who have a chronic illness that
they will have to live with for the rest of their lives have found the perfect
aid to escape being marginalized by the system, and to continue receiving the
help and treatment that they need.
3. Assistance to dependent patients: an ever-aging country that does not support the increasing demands of the population of elderly dependents could be a major
flaw in the health system. However, eHealth, through the latest advances in
telemedicine, improves the medical attention to these types of patients.
4. Rehabilitation: hailed as the most
significant method in terms of improved accessibility for the patient, cost
efficiency, and quality of care, the patient utilizes technological devices
that facilitate repetitive and progressive physical therapy.
Are we taking full advantage? From the perspective of
the patients, it is already easy to find solutions in the first three cases. Perhaps not with the diversity that they want, but it is true that current
systems are in place that can make life easier if
their demand focuses on the specified cases.
From the perspective of the health professionals, above all in the private
sector and certainly in point 4, solutions are already being offered, in less
intensity, above all in points 2 and 3. Health professionals highlight that
point 4 presents an opportunity full of challenges. Yet, perhaps this is
because they are not taking full advantage of the edge that technology can
offer.