Coronavirus: Could virtual consultation with doctors contain its spread in India?
Doctors could teleconsult and do a preliminary screening of patients and their symptoms, to avoid them coming in to clinics and allowing access to more patients, anywhere in the country
The Coronavirus outbreak has made China a testbed of remote work, education and healthcare. With millions quarantined, thousands affected, major cities under lockdown, technology is being used extensively to identify and eliminate potential transmitters. Startups and companies in China are updating their apps, so food, grocery and parcel delivery can happen without customers and riders even meeting; hospitals are installing contactless lockers, so food can be unlocked by medical staff with the help of QR codes. Children are being homeschooled through live streaming, employees are using virtual meeting tools leading to an increase of several million corporate users in the last fortnight or so.
The Chinese are also finding comfort in consulting doctors online, to know more about their symptoms and alleviate concerns around a possible infection. US agencies like the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are encouraging people to consult a doctor over a video, chat or phone, before showing up at clinics.
Let’s understand why this push for remote healthcare makes sense in India: India’s doctor to patient ratio stands at 1:1700, while WHO recommends 1:1000. There are approximately 1.1 beds per 1,000 persons, compared to the world average of 2.7. Our country has a wealth of medical expertise, yet it also one of the largest countries in the world in terms of both area and population. The country’s population density is at 420 people per square kilometre, as compared to China’s, which is around 148 per sq km. Public hospitals are typically overcrowded, while private care stays out of reach for many. In about 6 lakh villages, where 69 percent of India’s population lives, the number of doctors is only a fourth of those in urban areas. Approximately 12 percent patients go without access to primary health care every day.
It would be a win-win to get government doctors on-board such platforms, so they can pay a virtual visit and advise next steps, including tests at home, if possible.
Sure, teleconsulting may not be able to administer full treatment, but it will definitely make a difference in screening patients, protecting healthcare workers and containing spread of the infection, while also helping with follow-up care when in quarantine.
The writer is Chief Healthcare Strategy Officer at Practo