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Colorado Telemedicine IT to connect 400 hubs

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CIOL Bureau
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DENVER, US: The Colorado Hospital Association (CHA) and the Colorado Behavioral Healthcare Council (CBHC) have selected Qwest Communications to provide high-speed broadband services that will link nearly 400 of the state’s urban and rural health care and behavioral health providers, and facilitate telemedicine access.

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Once complete, the Colorado Telehealth Network will be the among the largest health care information networks in the United States, adds the press note.

The Colorado Telehealth Network, managed by CHA and CBHC and powered by Qwest, will also move Colorado one step closer to achieving one of Gov. Bill Ritter’s promises: to significantly expand broadband communication to rural areas of the state.

“The ability of Colorado’s health care providers to accurately exchange information with each other in a timely fashion is a critical component of the state’s efforts to make health care more affordable, and to improve coverage and access,” Ritter said. “I am pleased to see our vision of an interconnected system move one step closer to reality.”

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Once completed, the Colorado Telehealth Network will connect nearly 400 hospitals, clinics and other health care and behavioral health providers in Colorado to Qwest’s national fiber-optic network and enable them to provide patients,especially those in rural areas, with long-distance medical care using speeds up to 100 megabits per second.

“Too many rural communities are isolated from many of the advanced diagnosis and treatment technologies available in urban areas,” said CHA President and CEO Steven J. Summer. “The Colorado Telehealth Network, when implemented, will enable Coloradans to receive the right care, at the right place and at the right time.”

Telehealth and telemedicine services provide patients in rural areas with access to critically needed medical specialists, in some instances without leaving their homes or communities. Intensive care providers can monitor critically ill patients around the clock and video conferencing allows specialists and mental health professionals to care for patients in different rural locations, often hundreds of miles away. The network will enhance the delivery of health services, help control costs and make care more affordable, reduce travel time for consumers, decrease medical errors and enable health care providers to share critical information. It also will minimize the amount of time workers are away from their jobs visiting health care professionals.

CHA and CBHC expect that the Colorado Telehealth Network will connect approximately 70 per cent of the 388 eligible facilities by the end of the year and will complete connectivity in early 2010.