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Doctors oversee patients from afar
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BALTIMORE (Map, News) - If you get seriously ill or injured in a rural part of Maryland, the doctor overseeing your care just might be in Wilmington, Del.

With a $3 million grant from BlueCross BlueShield, six Maryland hospitals formed a partnership called Maryland eCare and contracted with intensive-care specialists at Wilmington’s Christiana Care Health System.

The hospitals, looking for solutions to intensive-care physician shortages, will use a program to provide up-to-the-minute vital statistics and video feeds for doctors’ patients.

The doctors in Delaware will call the shots on medical decisions between 7 p.m. and 7 a.m. Their decisions will be carried out by nurses and other staff in Maryland.

The trend alarmed Bill Wasserman, president of the Maryland State Medical Society, who said the state has a growing reputation for being inhospitable to physicians.

“It’s unique but disturbing,” Wasserman said. “The reason you have intensive care is that these patients are terribly sick and the most vulnerable patients that we have. Adequate bedside care is paramount.”

Maryland’s eCare program will serve 71 patient beds in six hospitals by 2010, officials said, and at least four other hospitals are considering participating.

About 200 hospitals around the country now participate in such long-distance monitoring by doctors, said Dr. Marc Zubrow, Christiana’s medical director.

Doctors can handle 120 to 150 patients each, he said, with help from computer programs that track vital readings for anomalies and signs of distress.

“Physically, if you had to move from bed to bed checking patients, that would be impossible,” Zubrow said. “We’re not taking the place of bedside doctors. This is an additional layer of care.”

Rural hospitals have the hardest time recruiting intensive-care physicians because few hospitals can afford to be staffed around the clock, he said.

“You can’t get phone calls around the clock 365 days a year for very long without burning out,” Zubrow said.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

khille@baltimoreexaminer.com


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4:17 AM MST on Wed., Jul. 9, 2008 re: "Labor, liberal groups press for national health plan"

Examiner Reader said:
It is the health insurance industry that is the problem. It's a private club for those that can afford it.Health care is expensive because of them!They are stealing us blind and nobody seems to get it!Universal health care is not for everybody.Because you will have those that are exempt from it because they work for the goverment.

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8:02 PM MST on Sun., Jun. 22, 2008 re: "Activists hold demonstration for universal health care"

Shelley Trazkovich MD said:
I did some of that pulling myself up by my bootstraps and forgoing vacations and all the things that premed students and medical students and interns and resident doctors do. That other reader can call me lazy, but I work harder now just to survive some of the minutes in my days. I am a disabled doctor who knows that the US ranks 37th in health care quality measures. Unless you are a CEO of a health insurance company, you haven't worked enough to pay your medical bills if you get seriously ill in this country. I want a health care plan in this country that covers everyone comprehensively with quality medical care. I want health security for you and me and I want to stop having our health care dollars being drained away by the wasteful insurance companies that save money by denying health care as much as they can get away with it. Our health insurance is cruel to those who are ill. We need to open our eyes and look at what is working in the other industrialized countries around us.

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9:36 AM MST on Sat., Jun. 21, 2008 re: "Activists hold demonstration for universal health care"

Examiner Reader said:
I do not want universal health care, and I don't want it forced upon me. What about working two or three jobs, foregoing vacations and pulling yourself up by your own bootstraps? Instead of crying "give me, give me, give me," be responsible for your miserable self and put in an honest day's work seven days a week. There are more of us doing that then you lazy people realize.

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12:10 PM MST on Fri., Jun. 20, 2008 re: "Activists hold demonstration for universal health care"

Examiner Reader said:
I dont know about you people, but I love paying an arm and a leg for the worst healthcare of most civilized nations.

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10:54 AM MST on Wed., May. 21, 2008 re: "Health care gaming coming of age"

Ron George said:
We appreciate your interest in "Healthcare Gaming Coming of Age" (May 13, 2008), but please be aware of several errors of fact in your story. * BreakAway did not recently win a contract with Texas A&M. BreakAway was hired by Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi in 2005 to produce Pulse!! (two exclamation points). * The Medical College of Georgia has nothing whatever to do with the development of Pulse!! but has recently contracted BreakAway to produce a product derived from Pulse!! technology, which has been licensed to BreakAway by the Texas A&M System, which owns the Pulse!! intellectual property. MCG is a BreakAway customer not a developer of Pulse!! * Pulse!! was conceived and is designed, so far, to provide medical education for physicians. There are no Pulse!! cases in development for nursing education. Your news product would be more credible without these misleading errors of fact.

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10:06 AM MST on Fri., May. 2, 2008 re: "State Hispanic population growing; officials rethink outreach programs"

Examiner Reader said:
The hispanic population grew and 99% of that growth is probably attributed to illegals. Let's reward them for breaking the law by giving them health care. Great idea.

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5:23 PM MST on Mon., Apr. 14, 2008 re: "Baltimore doctors wary of electronic health records’ cost"

Examiner Reader said:
There are only 21 products meeting the CCHIT 2007 criteria - even fewer actually implemented products. Back-up data on a simple hard drive like the i-book - a terabyte (million million) of storage costs less than 300 dollars at Costco! The practice is less likely to burn down since there aren't so many paper files... and less paper cuts... and less lifting of heavy boxes of paper records... and let's just get with the program and stop dragging our feet - and make it work!

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