I've written about this before in a
different forum, but that was ages ago and it still holds true.
People thinking that fibre isn't
necessary for telehealth don't understand just how many kinds of
applications there are, and the truly vast scale of the data that can
be produced.
If you live in any reasonable suburb,
there's a fair chance that it has a medical imaging joint servicing
the local GP. There are more than 200 in greater Sydney, Google tells
me – and most of these aren't in the lousy-with-fibre streets near
major hospitals. They're in suburban high streets or the upper levels
of ordinary shopping centres.
Go and get a CAT scan, look at those
images, think how many there are if you've got lots of pictures in
the scan, and take a guess at the amount of data there is. Individual
images – depending on resolution – might range from 60 MB to
multi-GB per image.
Which is why you go back to the joint to collect the images, go home, and then drive to your GP to deliver them.
Which is why, because the private
imaging joint I have in mind didn't have a fibre link to Royal Prince
Alfred hospital, I once found myself asked by a specialist treating
my wife to walk to the place, pick up the DVD, and return it to him
as quickly as possible, since they needed the images for a procedure
due to start in 20 minutes.
It's sneakernet, sometimes with cars, all because there isn't fibre.
Now, consider this in economic terms –
by which I mean stuff like productivity and unnecessary travel.
This report
tells us that per 1,000 head of population in 2009-2010, there were
816 imaging procedures. For 22 million of us, that means there are
nearly 18 million imaging procedures taking place.
Let's assume that just 25 percent of
these happen in the suburban imaging service – 4.5 million. And
let's assume a standard model, with all trips being 1km each way at
an easy-to-calculate 50c per km:
- Trip to GP to get referral for imaging
- Trip to imaging centre for imaging
- Trip to imaging centre to collect images
- Trip to GP to deliver results
If the images can be delivered directly
from the centre to the GP, the travel is reduced by 25 percent. Each
year, in other words, connections suitable for lots of gigabytes
would (in this very simple model) save 9 million kilometres
of unnecessary travel.
That's nearly two billion tons of
carbon, not to mention the cost of the travel, and there's the
productivity cost to be considered. If you include time hanging
around in the waiting room, those 4.5 million trips could easily
represent a couple of million hours of unproductive time.
Even that's only $50 million a year, if
we assess a productive hour as being worth $25. Plus (say) $9 million in travel. But get this: it's
$59 million a year, probably rising – and it goes on forever.
There won't be a year in the future in which there will suddenly be
no medical images created.
And that's just one
fibre-medicine opportunity. There are others, and every single one of
them delivers real-money benefits.
If you
try to imagine “telemedicine” as a single monolithic entity,
you're missing the real point. Medicine – in any form – involves
a huge number of different interactions, and many of those
interactions are some kind of “sneakernet”. It's just that it's
not easy to write a single article, or post a single video, that
explains all the interactions.
“But
you don't need to transmit that much data!” isn't an argument, it's
a reflex built from a simplistic understanding of the billions of
interactions involved in healthcare that get better with better
connectivity.
1 comment:
Don't have a problem with that. (Although several of my specialists -not GP - already get scans by network sans NBN, and my uncle operates a dedicated network for this in regional Victoria which has been there for years.) Do have a massive problem with people saying the NBN will allow images to be sent from rural hospitals to specialists in capital cities - eg Rudd, when announcing stroke care policy - when the rural hospitals don't have the machines to take the pictures, or staff to operate said machines.
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