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Teleconsul­tation gains patronage amid virus spread

- SWEDHA RADHAKRISH­NAN

Amid fear of contractin­g COVID, many people in the city have turned to teleconsul­tation services for treatment. Patients who are under home quarantine and unwilling to get hospitalis­ed are turning to teleconsul­tation to cope with the illness.

Sixty Plus, a virtual care company, consults for COVID-infected patients under home quarantine. “We get at least 20 teleconsul­tations daily because people are scared to step out of the house. They feel online consultati­on is much safer.

Even people from other countries are getting in touch with us to provide teleconsul­tation to their parents or relatives who stay here in the city,” said Arivu Arasi, founder of Sixty Plus.

For a consultati­on, patients should provide a COVID test report and their history of comorbid disease. Doctors will prescribe medicines and diet plans. “We deliver prescribed medicines and also arrange for COVID test, blood test and CT scan for them. We also send nurses to put in drips or injections if needed. In case the patient’s oxygen level drops or in an emergency, we call for an ambulance, help them stabilise at the hospital and admit them to Rajiv Gandhi Government General Hospital for further treatment,” said Arivu.

They claim that telemedici­ne appointmen­ts typically cost less than in-person visits do. This reduces out-of-pocket costs, removing a barrier to care.

“When I tested positive, I chose for home quarantine. I decided to get a telemedici­ne consultati­on. They are available round the clock. The fee is much lesser than offline consultati­on,” said a patient.

Even major private healthcare chains like Apollo Hospitals are providing teleconsul­tation for presymptom­atic patients or those with mild symptoms. The group have been getting more than 50-100 calls daily.

“In case there is an emergency, the patient will be hospitalis­ed immediatel­y. The pandemic has increased the number of teleconsul­tations,” said Dr Jaya Kumar Reddy, consultant paediatric­ian,

Apollo Hospitals.

Health Secretary J Radhakrish­nan said, “Teleconsul­tation is an important tool. Tamil Nadu government’s telemedici­ne portal, e-sanjeeveni, does the maximum teleconsul­tation in India. Similarly, the private sector also monitors patients with mild symptoms after the initial examinatio­n. It is an instrument­al tool to reduce the unnecessar­y burden at tertiary care centres. Teleconsul­tation is better than zero consultati­on.”

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