6 regulatory and procedural hurdles for multistate telemedicine

For the most part, the laws that govern the practice of medicine in the United States are state laws. One of the few things Federal law does say is that jurisdiction of those laws is based on the patient’s location, not the doctor’s. That’s tough news for a mobile health company that wants to establish any sort of multi-state telemedicine practice, whether it’s evaluating moles and blemishes via store-and-forward dermatology or doing virtual video consultations on an iPad. More

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Ethics and HIT

Challenges...
http://jamia.bmj.com/site/icons/amiajnl8946.pdf
  • patient safety should trump all other values; corporate concerns about liability and intellectual property ownership may be valid but should not over-ride all other considerations;
  • transparency and a commitment to patient safety should govern vendor contracts;
  • institutions are duty-bound to provide ethics education to purchasers and users, and should commit publicly to standards of corporate conduct; and
  • vendors, system purchasers, and users should encourage and assist in each others’ efforts to adopt best practices.

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Benefit from new technologies... enable people to have remote access to CBT

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