(Reposted January 31, 2016) --A federal broadband initiative may
have implications for the health system, too, NPR reports.
"Millions of Americans who live
in rural areas travel long distances to get health care. Or they may go without
it. But high-speed Internet connections now make it possible to bring a
doctor's expertise to patients in far-off places, if those places are connected.
"As part of its National
Broadband Plan, the Federal Communications Commission has pledged $400 million
a year to connect nearly 12,000 rural health care providers."
On example is Redwoods Rural Health
Center in Redway, Calif. The clinic has 4,000 patients and only one doctor, and
is 200 miles from San Francisco.
"Patients come in with skin
problems, cancers, diabetes, hepatitis — all diseases that require expertise
[the doctor] may not have.
"So she has to send patients to
doctors in cities 100 or more miles away. That can be hard on many of them,
both physically and financially." Broadband could help connect those
patients to specialists without the stress of travel."
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