Telecare
Telecare — healthcare technology of the future?
February 2006
Telecare technologies may be one answer to providing healthcare
for the UK’s burgeoning — and rapidly ageing — population, says
Cisco Systems’s Chris Blenkhorn.
Traditionally, NHS patients have travelled to hospitals for tests
and consultations with clinical specialists. With the UK population
set both to grow and age, however — and with the consequent greater
demands for new healthcare procedures and treatments — this may no
longer be possible. Long-established patterns of healthcare such as
these may have to transform if the NHS is to meet Government and
patient expectations within its budget.

The reality, of course, is that healthcare has been changing for
some time in order to reduce costs and increase efficiency. The need
to liberate funds for reinvestment and to change spending priorities
has been substantial. Specialist clinical resources are being
relocated into regional or national centres, and an increasing
number of hospitals no longer have specialists in every discipline.
Patients are being monitored at health centres or in the community,
rather than in hospital, especially when suffering from chronic
conditions.
The natural consequence of this has been some reduction in
contact between the patient and the clinician. However, many believe
that the innovative use of IT and network technologies can help
redress this situation, and there have been many attempts to
introduce telemedical and telecare services in recent years.
Unfortunately, many of these services have not been successful,
often because of the lack of suitable network technologies. It is
instructive to look at recent major advances in this area and see
the huge potential for networking to drive advances in telecare.
Networking technology
Telecare services depend critically on the availability of
standards, and on ready access to the right local (LAN) and
wide-area network (WAN) services (see Jargon buster). In the past
these have not always been available, hampering service development,
but advances have recently occurred in three areas interconnection
and inter-working standards, high speed, video-capable links between
NHS sites, and high-performance network links into the home.
Interconnection and interworking standards
Standards are critical for the development and effective delivery
of all aspects of IT. Telecare requires standards for physical
connection to medical devices and system end points, and for logical
communication between end points. Physical connection to systems and
end points is now, in practice, by Ethernet local area network
(LAN), or by IEEE 802.11 wireless connection (WiFi). Both of these
can be provided easily and cost-effectively in the hospital, clinic
or at home, and many hospitals have already implemented overlay
wireless LANs (WLANs) for telecare and other mobility projects.
Logical communication between end points uses Internet Protocol (IP)
the communications protocol that drives the Internet and most
networked IT applications. The information modes used in telecare
data, voice and video are all now fully standardised to operate IP.
High-speed, video-capable links between NHS sites
Many attempts to introduce telecare services in the past were
based on the use of NHSnet the old NHS national network for
communication between NHS sites. This was not always successful, as
NHSnet did not provide sufficient bandwidth or adequate quality of
service both being prerequisites for voice and video traffic.
Projects either had to change the scope of their services, or were
forced to install special-purpose network links, the cost of which
often eroded business benefits.
The Government has recognised the importance of enabling network
infrastructure for all aspects of healthcare delivery. The NHS
National Programme for IT (NPfIT) will deliver N3, the new national
network, to provide robust, secure and standardised network
connectivity to all NHS clinical locations. N3 has the ability to
support multimedia traffic for telecare, and positions trusts very
favourably for the development of site-to-site telecare services.

Network links into the home
In the past it was only possible to link into patients homes via
standard telephone connections. These connections were slow and
inflexible, and furthermore affected patients use of their
telephones. The Governments Broadband Britain initiative, however,
has accelerated the availability of high-speed digital
subscriber-line (DSL) connections across the country. While DSL also
uses existing telephone connections, it does not affect normal
telephone use and can be provided in a matter of days without any
changes to home wiring. DSL has the additional benefit of
ever-decreasing cost points.
Within the home, medical monitoring devices can connect to a DSL
service via very simple plug and play methods a simple Ethernet
cable, or a WiFi connection for greater flexibility. In the future,
DSL may not be required at all, at least in urban areas, as medical
devices in patients homes will be able to connect directly to WiFi
broadband services.
Business need and technology driving innovation
We have mentioned the business need for more efficiencies in the
use of clinical resources. The very substantial developments in
network technologies and the availability of enabling network
services through N3 make this now possible.
This combination represents a clear platform for innovation. If
fully exploited in the future, it could lead to the next major step
in the transformation of healthcare services after the current
deployment of the National Programmes IT applications suite. Indeed,
it is possible that telecare services such as teleconsultation,
telediagnosis and telemonitoring could be incorporated into the
National Programme in the future.
Linking the patient and clinician
Teleconsultation services provide direct video links between
patients and clinicians. This benefits patients by increasing access
to specialists and reducing the need for travel. Teleconsultation
over ISDN circuits is already in use in the NHS, for example for
out-of-hours consultations between community and acute hospitals,
although video quality can be poor. These services are likely to
become commonplace with N3, which has been designed to support
high-quality video connections. Video telephony is now available in
a form fully integrated with voice telephony, so there is no need to
provide special-purpose networks for patients to consult clinicians.
Looking to the future, 3G wireless telecommunications devices will
support a suitable quality of video, and it will be possible to
extend consultation directly into patients homes.
Centralising diagnostic services
Telediagnosis services permit a patients scan or image to be sent
to a remote specialist for diagnosis and report. The benefit to the
NHS of this approach is the more effective use of skilled and
centralised clinical resources. The benefit to the patient will be
faster reporting following scans and tests.
Scan images may be sent over IP via file transfer or attached to
emails, but image files can be very large and require significant
bandwidth. Images of external, eg dermatological, conditions, can be
handled photographically or over video links. N3 provides high
bandwidth and is video-capable, offering an excellent vehicle for
the development of these telediagnosis services.
Remote monitoring in hospital, clinic and in the home
Telemonitoring, often referred to as telemedicine in the past,
permits medical devices attached to patients to be accessed and
controlled from a central monitoring station. The network links
connecting device and monitoring station may take a variety of forms
wired or wireless LAN links within hospitals, links over N3 between
clinical locations, and GPRS mobile-phone-network or DSL links from
patients homes and in the community.
Telemonitoring can be found in many guises within the NHS. In its
simplest form it can provide a link between a bedside medical device
and a nurses station. Nowadays medical devices are becoming WiFi
capable, permitting active monitoring as a patient is moved from
ward to ward, or from ward to theatre. In the future, telemonitoring
will be increasingly available in the community and in patients
homes. This will be particularly important for successfully managing
chronic conditions without taking up valuable hospital bed space.
In conclusion
The NHS is witnessing the fortunate co-incidence of business need
to deliver healthcare services more cost effectively, and the tools
to do so new network technology standards and highly capable, but
low-cost, network products.
This offers an excellent opportunity for NHS trusts to exploit
networking for telecare to benefit patients and clinicians,
particularly as the National Programme is providing the enabling N3
infrastructure.
There are already many examples of telecare in operation,
particularly teleconsultation and telediagnosis, and every trust
should have the development of business plans high on its priority
list.
Chris Blenkhorn is a Consulting Systems Engineer with Cisco
Systems Ltd and a member of Ciscos UK public sector team, where he
specialises in healthcare networking.
Jargon buster
DSL (digital subscriber line)
A family of digital systems
designed to allow high-speed data communication over existing copper
wires. The first technology based on DSL was ISDN, though ISDN is
not often recognised as such nowadays.
Ethernet
A very widely used local area network (LAN) standard for
hardware, communications and cabling.
GPRS (general packet radio service)
A standard for wireless communications based on the GSM mobile
phone system, but running at speeds of up to 115kbps. This makes it
suitable for email and web browsing. It is also known as 2.5G and is
being superseded by the faster 3G system.
IP (internet protocol)
A digital communications protocol that
delivers data in packets over the Internet.
ISDN (integrated services digital network)
A set of standards for
digital transmission over ordinary telephone copper wire. It allows
multiple digital channels to be operated through a standard
interface. The most basic is two 64 kbps channels plus another lower
rate channel to handle signalling. The Primary Rate Interface (PRI)
consists of 23 channels plus a signalling channel. ISDN is adequate
for videoconferencing and some other high bandwidth applications.
LAN (local area network)
An enclosed computer network covering a
local area such as an office, home or group of buildings under a
single organisation.
Videotelephony Combined voice and video communications.
Voice telephony Voice communications by wire or radio waves.
WiFi (wireless fidelity) A wireless Ethernet network conforming to
the IEEE 802.11 standards and providing short-range, high data rate
connections between mobile devices and access points connected to a
wired network. The 802.11b and 802.11g standards operate at 2.4GHz,
giving data transmission rates up to 11Mbps and 54MBps respectively,
while the 802.11a standard operates at 5GHz and gives data
transmission rate up to 54Mbps also, but can offer more channels.
WLAN (wireless local area network)
A local area network that uses
radio waves to connect computers and devices to a wired network in
which some of the physical links are carried by a free-space
signalling system. Much of the cost of a LAN lies in the final
flexible link between the network outlet, which is wired in as a
fixed part of the fabric, and the actual end-user device such as a
PC or workstation.
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