Telemedicine on the rise in Northeastern Ontario
CBC News
Posted: Jan 16, 2012 9:19 AM ET
Last Updated: Jan 16, 2012 9:09 AM ET
Related
Related Links
External Links
(Note:CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external links.)
The North East Local Health Integration Network expects 30,000 trips to the doctor will be virtual online visits in 2012.
The health network is seeing an increase in the use of telemedine technology across Northeastern Ontario because it is such an effective tool to connect doctors and patients.
Colleen Harrison says her 10-month-old daughter Abigail burned her hand with a cup of tea. "I guess because of her age ... she didn't know enough to take her hand out of it so she was kind of standing there with her hand in this freshly boiled cup of tea. And I pretty much knew right away it wasn't going to be a nice burn." Doctors in North Bay recomended Harrison attend the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto but she was able to have the burn examined via a camera feed between North Bay and Toronto.
Laura Boston, senior project manager with the LHIN, says telemedicine is more than a simple video link.
"There's an electronic stethoscope for listening to live heart and breath sounds and an ENT light source for examining the ear, nose and mouth areas."
Boston says there are over 200 telemedicine locations in the Northeast.
While some clients have said they would like to use telemedicine from home rather than visit the hospital or local long term care home to access the service, Boston said that's still on the horizon. She says the long-term plan is to make telemedicine web-based so that patients can connect with medical services from home.
Share Tools
Latest Sudbury News Headlines
- More online post-secondary classes urged in Ontario
- A report before the ministry of post-secondary education says a third of courses in Ontario's colleges and universities should be moved from the classroom to the internet. more »
- Online surveillance bill setup costs estimated at $80M
- It's going to cost at least $80 million to implement the government's lawful access bill to force internet and telecommunications service providers to collect customer information in case police need it for an investigation, CBC News has learned. more »
- YouTubing stunt driver turns himself in to police
- A man turned himself into police Tuesday night after Timmins police requested the public's assistance in locating the driver of an erratically driven vehicle in that city. more »
- Increase seating at Sudbury amphitheatre, council says
- Sudbury city council is worried the new Bell Park amphitheatre could be quiet for most of this summer. more »
Top News Headlines
- Graham James apologizes to sex-abuse victims
- Graham James, the former junior hockey coach and convicted sexual abuser whose victims included ex-NHLers Theoren Fleury and Sheldon Kennedy, has told a courtroom: "For my behaviour, I am deeply sorry.… Parents expected sons to be safe; not all were." more »
- Target dangles designer Jason Wu to lure Canadians
- Target Corporation's move into Canada, premiering with cheap fashions by hot designer Jason Wu, needs to promise and consistently deliver quality fashions at retail prices similar to U.S. rates, analysts say. more »
- Santorum, Romney spar in Republican debate
- Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum swapped accusations about spending and taxes Wednesday night in the 20th and possibly final debate of the roller-coaster race for the Republican presidential nomination. more »
- Qur'an burning riots kill 2 NATO soldiers
- Two NATO soldiers were shot and killed Thursday by a man wearing an Afghan army uniform who had joined protesters objecting to Qur'an burnings that took place at a U.S. base earlier in the week, says Reuters. more »

