Coronavirus (COVID-19), which originated in Wuhan, China and has spread to at least 40 countries and 80,000 victims, with 2,700 fatalities, has been roiling both financial and healthcare markets. The stock price of payers in the US have been hit hard due to an anticipated uptick in illness, but interestingly, Teladoc has been up quite smartly in the past few days. Teladoc reported that one of eight virtual visits in January was due to flu, which isn’t atypical–but half had not used Teladoc before. Analysts do expect that there’s an opportunity for telehealth and telemedicine providers to attract new users due to what this Editor has dubbed ‘conscious contact’–that if you even feel remotely sick, you’re going to turn to a virtual visit.
COVID-19 is not remotely near a pandemic outside of China. The three hallmarks of a pandemic are cross-seasonal outbreaks (so far only in China), cross-geography (done), and most importantly, attacking the well. The fatalities have been among those with compromised immune systems, not among the young and healthy who do get it. It’s alarming, like SARS, because of the origination in animals, and the ease of person-to-person transmission via travel, as the outbreaks in Iran, South Korea, Italy, and on cruise ships visiting Asia have confirmed. In the US, the CDC is reporting that it is not currently spreading in the community, but is preparing for that scenario including containment, and has been since January.
But beyond the virtual visit, there are other areas where digital health is part of dealing with COVID-19:
- Preventing the spread to the patient’s family members. Avaya has been working in China since January to provide enterprise customers with home agents to prevent the spread of the virus. For hospitals, they have donated equipment to enable remote consultation services and remote visiting video at the hospitals, including observation of isolation wards. They have provided a case study of their work with the Tongxiang Hospital at the Tongxiang Branch of Zhejiang Province People’s Hospital. (Photo at left courtesy of Avaya.)
- Another is remote patient monitoring. Sheba Medical Center in Tel Hashomer, Israel, is using Tyto Care to monitor the 12 Israeli returnees from the Diamond Princess cruise ship, who continue to be in isolation. The patients will perform the tests on themselves, especially respiratory tests. Jerusalem Post
- Update 2 Mar: A representative from Sheba, the largest hospital system in the Middle East, was kind enough to contact me with additional information on their RPM program for COVID-19. For patients requiring isolation in that stage of treatment, Sheba has implemented a modular ‘field hospital’ setup, similar to what the Israeli (and US) military use, which can be set up in any open area. This isolation is to protect immunosuppressed patients from disease spread in the main hospitals. Telehealth being used in addition to Tyto are the Vici telemedicine robot and the Datos Health app for home treated patients. This Editor believes that both European and US public health systems are looking at the Sheba and Israeli approach.
- Robots–actually a telehealth cart–are being tested for patient self-testing, much like Tyto Care’s use at Sheba. Robots could also deliver food (although they could also carry germs) and sweep streets.
- Other monitoring can be done via symptom checkers (Babylon, K, and others). 98point6 released a coronavirus screening chatbot app as early as January, but what they’ve turned up so far is more cases of the flu. STAT
- Data analytics can pinpoint outbreaks. The Epic, Athenahealth, and Meditech EHRs have released new guidance, testing orders and screening questions (e.g. around travel and contacts) that will help to identify outbreaks.
Update 28 Feb: This Editor would like to know more about UV disinfection being used versus coronavirus for large spaces such as in hospitals and aircraft. If you have information on technologies such as PurpleSun which have been tested against hospital pathogens also being used against coronavirus, please contact Editor Donna.
Healthcare technologies which weren’t around during the SARS and swine flu epidemics may make a big difference in the spread, treatment and mortality rate of COVID-19. Healthcare Dive, HealthTechMagazine
UPDATE 28 FEB
As a service to our Readers, we are providing the following health service update links:
The UK Department of Health and Social Care and Public Health England has provided the following links to coronavirus guidance (hat tip to DOHSC via LinkedIn):
👩⚕️ Health:
🚂 Transport:
👩🎓 Education:
👨💼 Employers:
🏡 Social care:
US Centers for Disease Control (CDC)
- Summary page with multiple links including laboratories and health department resources: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/summary.html
- For Healthcare Professionals including infection control in clinical and home care; a webinar and FAQs: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-nCoV/hcp/index.html
- CDC in Action: Preparing Communities for Potential Spread of COVID-19:
World Health Organization (WHO) main website on coronavirus:https://www.who.int/health-topics/coronavirus
Health Canada’s main page: http://ow.ly/bLtF50yfJb7
Laurie Orlov
Wouldn’t it be great if any of these tech tactics made it into the news media, which is busy spreading anxiety and panic?
Donna Cusano
Laurie–Yes, it would! What’s the saying, ‘if it bleeds, it leads’?
And so much of the prevention of spread is common-sense: washing hands, using a quality sanitizer, cleaning surfaces, isolation and self-isolation, and avoiding large gatherings. One of the factors in exploding the Spanish Flu of 1918 into a pandemic was the government actually encouraging large Liberty Bond rallies in places like Philadelphia. People then knew better!
Another tech which I didn’t get into here is using UV to sanitize aircraft, hospitals and other common spaces. I’d love more information on this.
I also wonder how quickly our domestic pharma can ramp up to replace antibiotic production which has been disrupted, as well as other medical supplies.