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These iPhones could save your life

These iPhones could save your life

By:  Briony Smith  On: 08 Oct 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Apple's popular smart phone is being used by Foothills Regional Emergency Services in Alberta to access electronic patient histories. Next up: bi-directional capabilities

The staffers are even able to deal with areas without cellphone coverage. The paramedic teams work with the 911 operators to get as much patient information as possible so that they can pull up the correct record prior to arriving at an emergency site outside of cellphone range. Doctors, too, have been benefitting from the service, using iPhones (and other mobile devices, like laptops) to access patient records and give advice from the road. This allows the physicians to dispense advice with the full benefit of the patient’s history in front of them, instead of by memory.

The iPhone itself offers a large screen with plenty of reading room via the big browsing space. It’s also very cool, a factor that could speed up adoption of similar initiatives in healthcare regions across Canada, in spite of the medical industry’s reluctance to embrace new technologies, said Info-Tech Research senior research analyst Mark Tauschek. “If they can have this cool device that is also quite functional, more will want to accept it,” he said. “It’s not just iPhones, but smartphones, too, that are exploding in the health sector.

The iPhone’s fun factor could even help usher in the long-awaited age of electronic health records for all (currently, Alberta has 60 per cent saturation, and Ontario 25 per cent, with other provinces falling in between, said Taramina). Said Tauschek: “It could help move things along—if they’ve got the cool device to access them with.”










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Briony Smith Briony Smith is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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