conferencing, training and future extension to
remind on medication), it is not adopted at any
hospitals, because there is no cost-reduction
evidence and it does not integrate with hospital
EPRs. However, RRS can bring new valuable
functionality for the patient and his family i.e.,
access to prescriptions and extension to remind on
medicine intake. The interoperability of RRS with
doctors’ EPR is essential for RRS adoption. This is a
common challenge for other telemedicine adoption,
for example as pointed in a Norwegian CheckUp
Care system (Larsen, 2011).
This paper approaches the integration problem of
RRS to EPRs’s medicine module at caregiver’s site,
by assuming that an EPR at the caregiver’s site
integrates to SMC. It is therefore only needed to
integrate RRS medicine module, with SMC at
patient site. The integration scenario will make RRS
“transparent” for health professionals and allow for
patient empowerment through RRS adoption.
Our hypothesis is therefore twofold:
(H1) it is possible to achieve integration of the
patients’ site of the medicine module of RRS to SMC
in a reliable way
(H2) integration can be achieved without
unnecessary expenditure of man hours.
Following sections present methodology of
integration process in Sec 1; overview of Danish
healthcare, the relevant Danish health initiatives and
related work in Sec. 2; integration experiment and
results in Sec. 3; experimental results, constrains of
time-to-market of telemedicine in Sec. 4;
2 METHODOLOGY
This paper is original, in the sense that there have
not been done any integration experiments of
telemedical applications to SMC. Also, SMC is the
first and so far the only representative of a family of
national services that connect clinical patient data
across Denmark. There is a plan to create “sister”
services, like SMC, in the future, for shared data
access (SDSD, 2009), e.g., to lab results.
The integration experiment is part of a larger
project, Net4Care, initiated by Caretech Innovation
(CI). The need for interoperability of telemedicine
with national healthcare services (NHS) based on an
example of RRS and SMC has already been
published in (Hansen et al., 2011). This paper
presents first results of the initiatives.
The project of integrating RRS to SMC has
started in February 2011 and lasted for more than 6
month, including two month of implementation and
experience gathering. During the project, we
attended a technical, held by NSI, and a mixed
clinical and technical organized by (AAU, 2011)
workshops on Shared Medicine Card and a
workshop on Continua Health Alliance, held at CI.
To explore the possibilities of the security policy of
healthcare services, there was held a seminar for the
security research group at Aarhus University on the
topic. Besides, several companies were contacted in
order to gain better insight into different
technologies. For example, suppliers of National
Service Platform, Security Token Service Identity
Provider, developers of SMC, Security group at
Alexandra Institute and Lægemiddelstyrelsen for
getting the permission to perform the integration
experiment. The implementation aspects of
integration were logged in a diary as follows: every
day when the integration task started or ended (not
including the breaks, meetings, emails, workshops)
there was noted the amount of hours spent. Diary
details are available in (Urazimbetova, 2011).
3 OVERVIEW
We start with a brief overview on facts of healthcare
in Denmark, the lack of interoperability in
healthcare, the initiatives on connecting patient data
across the systems, which resulted in Shared
Medicine Card service. We then present the related
work and argue why experiment and results of this
paper brings concrete places of improving current
state of telemedicine in Denmark.
3.1 Lack of Interoperability
Danish healthcare is a public healthcare system
primarily financed through general taxes. The
responsibility of providing healthcare services lies
usually with the county; there is free access to
healthcare services for all 5.4 million citizens.
Healthcare sector should be of high quality, efficient
and allow for free choice of provider by users. It
consists of primary care with self-employed general
practitioners (GPs) and hospital care.
Healthcare IT systems, e.g., EPRs for hospitals,
have been developed independently by different
counties, delivered by different suppliers, without
adoption of a common platform or standards, which
resulted in non-interoperability of EPRs. The same
holds for the standalone telemedical applications,
like RRS or the adopted Cure4you communication
system that integrate to some EPRs.
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