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Hillary Clinton Reveals Mental Health Plan That Taps Telehealth for Care Coordination

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–Healthcare IT News

Democratic Presidential Candidate Hillary Clinton posted her plans for mental health care on August 29 with a focus on harnessing information technologies to bolster care coordination.

Clinton said she would adjust payment systems in Medicare, Medicaid, and under the Public Health Service Act to allow for reimbursement of telepsychiatry and other telehealth services delivered through primary care and hospital settings.

“We’ve got to break through and break down the stigma and shame,” Clinton said. “We’ve got to make clear that mental health is not a personal failing. Right now it’s our country which is failing people with mental health issues.”

Her plan also calls for increasing research into brain and behavioral science, including work on PTSD traumatic brain injury; developing new links with private and nonprofit sectors; and brain and behavioral science research based on open data. Clinton also promised to direct federal agencies to study suicide and how to prevent it. Her plan also calls for training law enforcement officers to recognize and relate with people who have a mental illness.

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Palmetto Care Connections Receives USDA Distance Learning & Telemedicine Grant

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Submitted by Jim Allen, MPH, MSW, LMSW

Palmetto Care Connections was recently awarded $158,224 by the US Department of Agriculture Distance Learning & Telemedicine Grant Program.  The Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC) Center for Telehealth pledged a 100 percent cash match of $158,224 for a total amount of $316,448.  In addition MUSC pledged an in-kind match of $12,000 to assist with project implementation. Low Country Health Care System will provide primary health care services to school children in Allendale and Barnwell Counties.

This project seeks to establish school-based telehealth availability in three underserved counties, Allendale, Bamberg, and Barnwell, in South Carolina.  School-based clinics have been shown to increase health access to rural children, decreased emergency room visits, decrease absenteeism, improve chronic disease management and improve academic performance.  The application of telehealth allows the services to be delivered in rural areas and smaller schools without the sustainability barriers otherwise necessitating large, urban schools.   Acute sick care and chronic disease management is delivered in the school setting via a telehealth connection between the healthcare provider and the school nurse.  Telehealth equipment incorporates real-time video conferencing with examination capabilities.  Importantly, the model to be employed with this effort emphasizes the use of local providers as telehealth providers or care coordinating entities. Anticipated benefits include reduced emergency room visits, reduced missed work days for parents, increased access to healthcare for children, decreased absenteeism and tardiness for students, and educational achievement.

The MUSC Center for Telehealth has budgeted to expand its school-based telehealth program to a total of 40 schools. The following school districts are currently participating in the program: Charleston County School District, Williamsburg County School District, Sumter School District, and one school in Bamberg School District 1.  Allendale County School District, Bamberg School District 2, and the three Barnwell County School Districts are out of the designated catchment area for their expansion plan. This grant will enable the school-based telehealth program to expand to a total of 19 schools in Allendale County School District, Bamberg School Districts 1 & 2, and Barnwell County School Districts 19, 29 & 45.

For the school districts in the three counties, we will have three providers that will be able to offer services to all 19 schools.  Participating hub sites include Low Country Health Care System, MUSC and Allendale County Hospital. There will be 6,474 school-aged children eligible to benefit from this program by increasing access to high-quality health care. Equipment for end users (schools) will include Avizia 300 carts with a horus scope (exam camera and otoscope), and the Think Lab Stethoscope which will be used in the nurse’s offices. Equipment for the hub sites (primary care providers) includes a laptop with Jabber licensure, and high-quality head phones. For more information about this innovative program, please contact Trayce Shanks, RN, Telehealth Liaison, at [email protected] or Elana Wells, MPH, Program Manager, MUSC School-Based Health Center for Telehealth, at [email protected].

South Carolina Inmates to Receive Telehealth Care

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–The Post and Courier, Derrek Asberry

“The Medical University of South Carolina and the state Department of Corrections are teaming up to provide telehealth services to inmates in four South Carolina prisons.

Using the service, a doctor in Charleston can consult with the care team at a prison any time of day via video conferencing equipment. Then, the doctor can remotely prescribe medications, treatments and procedures that prison officials can implement for the inmate.”

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BlueCross Foundation awards $4.8M to S.C. groups

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-T&D

The BlueCross BlueShield of South Carolina Foundation will award $4.8 million to 13 organizations serving South Carolinians’ health needs.

“We are excited about the newest grant recipients,” Foundation Executive Director Harvey Galloway said. “These grants align with the mission of the foundation, which is to promote and support healthier South Carolinians, particularly the economically vulnerable.”

Recipients of the most recent grants serving local residents and those across the state include:

 

Advanced Care Planning (ACP) in South Carolina – Funds support activities to develop a strategic plan to promote ACP for the economically disadvantaged.


Greenwood Genetic Center – Support research toward the development of a blood-diagnostic test for autism.


Institute for Child Success– Complete a statewide study on the current protective services of child advocacy centers to produce research and policy recommendations focused on eliminating toxic stress.


Impact America — Provide free vision screenings using high-tech digital cameras in Head Start sites and low-income populations’ day care centers. Bamberg County is among those that will benefit.


Palmetto Palace –- Increase access to health care services through technology and telehealth using a mobile health van throughout the Lowcountry.


South Carolina Pharmacy Foundation Inc. – Plan and implement a statewide initiative to educate providers on the proper management of opioid addiction in order to prevent over-prescribing opioids and to increase public awareness of medication safety.


The Columbia Oral Health Clinic – Improve access to care by upgrading dental equipment to provide free dental examinations to uninsured and underinsured patients living with HIV/AIDS. Calhoun County is among those that will benefit.


The Medical University of South Carolina – Support the development of a burn-healing app that will increase access to medical care for burned children, as well as educate caregivers and providers on burn injury prevention efforts statewide.


The University of South Carolina Salkehatchie – Add a state-of-the-art simulation lab to assist nursing students for real-life situations. Bamberg County is among the areas that will benefit.

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Is There a Difference between Telemedicine and Telehealth?

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–mHealth Intelligence

Today’s healthcare ecosystem is filled with references to and examples of telemedicine and telehealth – in some cases, the two terms are used interchangeably. Whether they mean the same thing is a topic of considerable debate.

In general terms, telemedicine is considered the clinical application of technology, while telehealth encompasses a broader, consumer-facing approach – “a collection of means or methods, not a speci­fic clinical service, to enhance care delivery and education,” according to the federal network of telehealth resource centers.

“While ‘telemedicine’ has been more commonly used in the past, ‘telehealth’ is a more universal term for the current broad array of applications in the ­field,” the TRC network states in its online resource guide. “Its use crosses most health service disciplines, including dentistry, counseling, physical therapy and home health, and many other domains. Further, telehealth practice has expanded beyond traditional diagnostic and monitoring activities to include consumer and professional education. Note that while a connection exists between health information technology (HIT), health information exchange (HIE) and telehealth, neither HIE nor HIT are considered to be telehealth.”

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Blue Cross, Blue Choice Launch Telehealth App

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 -Charleston Regional Business Journal

BlueCross BlueShield of South Carolina and BlueChoice HealthPlan of South Carolina have launched an app for members that enables them to visit the doctor without going to the doctor’s office.

The app, Blue CareOnDemand, uses a telehealth technology from Boston-based firm American Well to connect members with physicians 24/7 via a computer, tablet or mobile phone. The doctor will review the member’s symptoms, ask and answer questions, make diagnoses and prescribe medications.

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GHS Enters Telehealth World with SmartExams

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–Greenville Online

Greenville Health System patients with minor ailments will soon be able to access a remote health care provider using technology instead of going to the doctor.

With SmartExams, established patients contact a service and provide their symptoms while a nurse practitioner or physician assistant calls them back to discuss a diagnosis and treatment plan.

SmartExams, which launches April 4, is one of several telehealth services popping up around the country in response to consumers who are looking for more convenient care in their busy lives and as the physician shortage makes it increasingly difficult to get a timely appointment with a doctor.

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American Telemedicine Association Makes CPT Code Requests for Medicare Telehealth Coverage in 2017

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ata logo

-American Telemedicine Association

“The American Telemedicine Association (ATA) requests that several Current Procedural Terminology (CPT) codes be approved for Medicare telehealth coverage begin in 2017. ATA recommends that CMS facilitate, to the maximum extent of the law, the inclusion of Medicare services that can be provided using telecommunications technology.”

Click here to view the codes.

 

School-Based Telehealth Recognized on National Rural Health Day

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TURNER CO., GA (WALB) –

As part of National Rural Health Day, Turner County Elementary School highlighted it’s TeleHealth Clinic that they started back in 2012 for students and faculty.

Students can make an appointment with their parent’s permission and see a doctor through a computer at school.

The doctor can diagnose the patient remotely and receive information from medical instruments connected to the computer.

“Having the Clinic right here we can get the appointment the same day and then they are able to get the appointment, be seen, and then they are able to go back to class and their prescriptions are called into the pharmacy of their choice,” said the Health Clinic Coordinator Gwendolyn Mathis.

There are also TeleHealth clinics at Turner County Special Services, Pre-K, middle and high schools.

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