GARDEN ROUTE NEWS - George Regional Hospital has taken a huge step in advancing critical care to its patients.
A Double Robotic device, called 'Georgie', is being used in a pilot project (the TeleICU project) that allows for connecting clinicians in the ICUs of George Regional and Groote Schuur Hospital to connect, which enables real-time critical care expertise access.
Traditionally, critical care outside the metro can be limited and often very expensive, owing to the current referral systems where further specialised services are located in tertiary health care facilities.
Dr Ivan Joubert, head of division of Critical Care Medicine at Groote Schuur Hospital, explains that in the case of George Regional, it is the only facility which is capacitated with an intensive care unit (ICU) in the region.
"This means it caters for a large population yet still must rely either on specialists travelling to George or transferring critically ill patients to Cape Town for these life-saving consultations to take place.
"For example, when patients are sent to Cape Town, it mostly requires the use of our Air Mercy Services to send an airplane from the metropole to George and comes at the cost of approximately R200 000."
Building on from the initial telehealth experiences used during the Covid-19 pandemic, George Regional made the decision to innovate and purchase this digital health technology to ensure the best possible care for patients.
The pilot is now connecting clinicians in the facilities' respective ICUs via a Double Robotic device (called “Georgie”) and is allowing for real-time critical care expertise access, improved decision-making, and knowledge transfer with overall improved patient outcomes.
With the device also requiring no subscriptions or additional IT infrastructure, the cost of this initiative has shown to very effective thus far.
"This means that a specialist from Groote Schuur is now routinely assisting critical care services in George Regional via the Double Robotic device and allowing scarce resources to be allocated elsewhere.
"As this pilot evolves, it will consider the impact it has on reducing rates of patient readmission and mortality, average length of stay, rate of transfers while also increasing staff and patient satisfaction," said Joubert.
Joubert through the robotic device was able to virtually join in on a visit of Health and Wellness Minister Nomafrench Mbombo to George Regional on Monday 18 December to inspect the TeleICU project.
Joubert said telemedicine has proven to be an opportunity of not only improving patient care, but also in building team relationships across facilities. "There are faceless names that you’ve spoken to often over the phone who are now as much a part of the critical care team as the staff here at home. Unique to our project is the fact that we’re using this as a peer-to-peer intervention, rather than a healthcare provider to patient approach traditionally used in telemedicine processes.”
'More equitable services'
Mbombo said the project is proving that specialists no longer must be by the bedside in order to render life-saving services. "We are now able to provide the same consultation without having to bear the costs of transfers or travelling.
"Even though this device is currently focused on critical care services, it possesses the immense potential of being expanded to other disciplines.
"Innovations such as these in the telemedicine area could make our healthcare services not only more accessible, but importantly more equitable."
Mbombo said due to the current constrained fiscal environment it is more important than ever to find new ways to improve the quality of healthcare while also cutting on costs. "I look forward to seeing how this pilot project brings the best possible care to patients in the Garden Route.”
Minister Nomafrench Mbombo being briefed on the TeleICU project by Dr Nellis van Zyl-Smit, the medical manager of George Regional Hospital, and Dr Ivan Joubert who joined virtually through the Double Robotic device Georgie.
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