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CATA now pushes for m-health in emergency network

CATA now pushes for m-health in emergency network

By:  Howard Solomon  On: 19 Feb 2013 For: Computing Canada Creator
 

Group says doctors and nurses should have access to proposed Canadian wireless network that originally was largely for police, fire, paramedics and crash investigators

The organization that represents the many of the country’s high tech companies is urging Industry Canada to expand the number of people eligible to access a proposed public safety wireless network to include doctors, nurses and clinicians.

The Canadian Advanced Technology Alliance (CATA) has issued a release calling on its members to lobby Members of Parliament and the press to urge Industry Canada to include mobile health (m-health) uses for the proposed network.

"Recent emergencies in public health and increased reliance on m-Health have demonstrated the criticality of getting the right information securely into the hands of those who need it most, in real time, and across jurisdictional boundaries," said CATA CEO John Reid in the release.

"Enhancing quality, improving convenience, extending reach and reducing cost of healthcare are the potential benefits of m-Health should the underlying mobile infrastructure be designed to provide ubiquitous broadband "medical grade" performance. Local governments, public safety and healthcare agencies across the country are evaluating the benefits of broadband wireless mobile networks for remote access to information, both mission critical and routine, to improve real-time situational awareness for better decision making and to enhance collaboration and information sharing."

Almost a year ago the Harper government decided that a section of valuable 700 MHz wireless spectrum should be set aside for a public safety wireless broadband network.

The idea is first responders will be able to send live video and still images from special cellphones – either single or dual-band -- or in-vehicle cameras from emergency sites to their headquarters for improved response. The network would be interoperable with a planned U.S. network running on similar spectrum so emergency responders near the border can talk to each other.

Many details have yet to be worked out, including who would own and manage the spectrum.

Last fall Industry Canada began a public consultation on the idea, which for most of the telecommunications industry has meant a network used by police, fire, ambulance workers and the like.

CATA’s push to include m-health uses for the network marks a bit of a change. In an October, 2012 submission to Industry Canada it made no mention of healthcare users having access to the network.  Its call to start lobbying MPs also comes long after the Nov. 26 deadline for submissions to Industry Canada on the public safety network closed.


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Howard Solomon Howard Solomon I'm assistant editor of ComputerWorld Canada covering network infrastructure, communications and government IT issues. An IT journalist  since 1997, I've written ... more

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