Abstract

An email-based telemedicine service was implemented in two remote village communities in Cambodia. Volunteer physicians at the Brigham and Women's Hospital, Massachusetts General Hospital and the Sihanouk Hospital Center of Hope in Phnom Penh provide monthly consultations to the local clinicians. Between February 2001 and May 2005, there were 469 teleconsultations. The 214 telemedicine cases involving new patients managed in the first 28 months were reviewed. The mean duration of the chief complaint at the initial patient visit was 37 months for the first six months and had dropped to eight months by the end of the study period. Of 63 adult patients surveyed, all were either satisfied (54%, n = 34) or very satisfied (46%, n = 29) with their experience in the telemedicine clinic. About 78% (n = 49) were willing to pay, on average, 0.63 US dollars for their visits. The introduction of basic point-of-care laboratory testing in November 2004 was associated with a reduction in patients requiring off-site referral for completion of laboratory testing (69% before to 35% afterwards, P < 0.001). The success of the pilot telemedicine programme confirms the value of email support for non-physician health-care workers in the developing world.

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