PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Virtual assistance is confirmed as an effective tool in monitoring HIV patients

A pioneering telemedicine program in HIV patient care through the Internet

2011-03-15
(Press-News.org) The Hospital Clínic of Barcelona presented today the results of the telemedicine program "Hospital VIHrtual", coordinated by Dr. Felipe Garcia and Dr. Agata León, from the Hospital Clínic Service of Infectious Diseases directed by Dr. Josep M ª Gatell. The tool has been created by a team from the Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, led by Prof. Enrique J. Gómez and César Cáceres. Through a direct connection via a webcam, Dr. Garcia showed a virtual consultation and explained the benefits of the project, which does not replace the classic face to face visits but complements and enhances them.

During the five years of the program, the Clínic team has cared by remote control for a total of 200 HIV-infected patients. This system, which results were recently published in the journal PLoS One, provides patients with medical care at home or wherever they can access the Internet. The study shows that the virtual hospital allows comprehensive control over the patient in medical, pharmaceutical, psychological and quality of life aspects. The results are as satisfactory as those obtained in a visit at the hospital.

The virtual hospital improves patient communication with the center, optimizing information about their own illness; At the same time by reducing the costs and time spent on traveling and waiting for visits or medications it helps patients to conciliate the HIV control with their everyday life and work.

For health professionals, the virtual hospital has also provided an optimization of time and space spent on consultations. The duration of a visit has been reduced from 20 to 10 minutes, allowing more consultations. In addition, the program makes a fast and direct communication possible between the patient and the specialist, without intermediaries, through the email, without entailing negative effects on clinical management or adherence to antiretroviral therapy.

It is, therefore, the first job in the world that validates a telemedicine project that allows the management of stable HIV infected patients globally via the Internet (consultations, clinical, psychological and social monitoring, medication, quality of life, coordination of the care team).

"Hospital VIHrtual" offers the following online services:

Consultations. The patient is visited through two ways by the medical, nursing, psychological, social care and pharmacology team: by video with previous appointments and through e-mail for sporadic consultations. In addition, they can also be visited in the hospital if wished. Management of medication and telepharmacy. In addition to providing information on the treatment of each patient, the program warns of possible changes in therapy and sends medication by conventional post. Information Management. Both program staff and the patient have unlimited access to information about the disease, medications, side effects, news, innovations ... On the Internet there are many data on AIDS and "Hospital VIHrtual" offers verified and validated information to patients through links to other sites and additional information written by the medical staff. Virtual Community. There are two communities within the program, both with news, discussion forums and blogs. One is for health professionals, where they can treat shared clinical cases, and another for patients, where they can detail their personal experiences with others and participate in virtual discussions with the healthcare team. The patient profile

Today's HIV stable patient is a patient with a normal quality of life, both in the social field and at work. Frequent visits to the hospital are a major investment of time and money for the patients. The virtual system allows the patient to go to the medical center only for the analytical extraction, and reduces the number of visits to the doctor from six or eight of the present system to only three or four. Many chronic AIDS patients have to attend business travels regularly, and this program allows patients to continue their treatment without altering their routine. Medication is sent to their home, or other locations specified by the patient.

The experience of this program is proving very successful results, in a scenario where both medical professionals and patients and NGOs demand an adaptation of the care of HIV patients to new requirements. Telemedicine is emerging as a service appropriate for this treatment, and Hospital VIHrtual as a safe and effective tool. This system, with variations, could become a model for the control of chronic stable patients suffering other diseases.

INFORMATION:

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Early success of anti-HIV preventive oral drug regimen is promising, but questions remain

Early success of anti-HIV preventive oral drug regimen is promising, but questions remain
2011-03-15
New Rochelle, NY, March 14, 2011—The first human studies of an oral drug regimen to prevent HIV infection in high-risk individuals yielded a promising near 50% reduction in HIV incidence, but a number of issues require additional research before oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) can be implemented on a large scale, according to an article in AIDS Patient Care and STDs, a peer-reviewed journal published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. (www.liebertpub.com). The article is available free online at www.liebertpub.com/apc After the success of a trial of PrEP in a high risk population ...

Trapping a rainbow: Lehigh researchers slow broadband light waves with nanoplasmonic structures

Trapping a rainbow: Lehigh researchers slow broadband light waves with nanoplasmonic structures
2011-03-15
BETHLEHEM, PA—A team of electrical engineers and chemists at Lehigh University have experimentally verified the "rainbow" trapping effect, demonstrating that plasmonic structures can slow down light waves over a broad range of wavelengths. The idea that a rainbow of broadband light could be slowed down or stopped using plasmonic structures has only recently been predicted in theoretical studies of metamaterials. The Lehigh experiment employed focused ion beams to mill a series of increasingly deeper, nanosized grooves into a thin sheet of silver. By focusing light along ...

Research shows rapid adoption of newer, more expensive prostate cancer treatments

2011-03-15
Boston, MA – With 180,000 men diagnosed with prostate cancer each year, it is one of the most common types of cancer in the country. For this reason, it has been cited as a good marker for health care spending in general, reflective of the greater trends across the United States. New research from the Dana-Farber/Brigham and Women's Cancer Center (DF/BWCC) shows that newer, more expensive treatment options for prostate cancer were adopted rapidly and widely during 2002 – 2005 without proof of their cost-effectiveness, and may offer explanations for why health care spending ...

Key mutations act cooperatively to fuel aggressive brain tumor

2011-03-15
Mutations in three pathways important for suppressing tumors cooperate to launch glioblastoma, an aggressive brain tumor that strikes children and adults. But new research from St. Jude Children's Research Hospital scientists shows those changes alone are not sufficient to cause cancer. Tumor formation requires additional mutations, some affecting different points in the same disrupted regulatory pathways. Researchers demonstrated that in mouse models of glioblastoma, tumors develop in several regions of the brain. The findings, as well as the technique investigators ...

Why argue? Helping students see the point

2011-03-15
Read the comments on any website and you may despair at Americans' inability to argue well. Thankfully, educators now name argumentive reasoning as one of the basics students should leave school with. But what are these skills and how do children acquire them? Deanna Kuhn and Amanda Crowell, of Columbia University's Teachers College, have designed an innovative curriculum to foster their development and measured the results. Among their findings, published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, dialogue is a better path to developing ...

Study puts notch on the jagged edge of lung cancer metastasis

Study puts notch on the jagged edge of lung cancer metastasis
2011-03-15
HOUSTON - Researchers discovered a new, key component in the spread of lung cancer as well as a likely way to block it with drugs now in clinical trial. The study was published today (Monday, March 14) in the Journal of Clinical Investigation. A team led by scientists at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center found a way to identify metastasis-prone lung cancer cells and then uncovered a mechanism that shifts primary tumor cells into a more deadly type of cell with the capacity to move elsewhere in the body. "We think tumors have to learn how to metastasize ...

DU researchers find that headway being made fighting communicable diseases globally

2011-03-15
DENVER – Those working for healthier humans around the globe are making headway in fighting communicable diseases such as AIDS, malaria and diarrheal illness, according to research from the Frederick S. Pardee Center for International Futures in the University of Denver's (DU) Josef Korbel School of International Studies. The center recently released the third in a series of five volumes that focus on human progress in which researchers explore topics such as education, poverty, infrastructure and governance. The latest book is Improving Global Health: Forecasting the ...

Nanorods developed in UC Riverside lab could greatly improve visual display of information

Nanorods developed in UC Riverside lab could greatly improve visual display of information
2011-03-15
VIDEO: When an external magnetic field is applied to the solution of nanorods, they align themselves parallel to one another like a set of tiny flashlights turned in one direction, and... Click here for more information. RIVERSIDE, Calif. – Chemists at the University of California, Riverside have developed tiny, nanoscale-size rods of iron oxide particles in the lab that respond to an external magnetic field in a way that could dramatically improve how visual information ...

NJIT prof offers new desalination process using carbon nanotubes

NJIT prof offers new desalination process using carbon nanotubes
2011-03-15
A faster, better and cheaper desalination process enhanced by carbon nanotubes has been developed by NJIT Professor Somenath Mitra. The process creates a unique new architecture for the membrane distillation process by immobilizing carbon nanotubes in the membrane pores. Conventional approaches to desalination are thermal distillation and reverse osmosis. "Unfortunately the current membrane distillation method is too expensive for use in countries and municipalities that need potable water," said Mitra. "Generally only industry, where waste heat is freely available, ...

Guided care reduces the use of health services by chronically ill older adults

2011-03-15
A new report shows that older people who receive Guided Care, a new form of primary care, use fewer expensive health services compared to older people who receive regular primary care. Research published in the March 2011 edition of Archives of Internal Medicine found that after 20 months of a randomized controlled trial, Guided Care patients experienced, on average, 30 percent fewer home health care episodes, 21 percent fewer hospital readmissions, 16 percent fewer skilled nursing facility days, and 8 percent fewer skilled nursing facility admissions. Only the reduction ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Call for papers: 14th Asia-Pacific Conference on Transportation and the Environment (APTE 2025)

A novel disturbance rejection optimal guidance method for enhancing precision landing performance of reusable rockets

New scan method unveils lung function secrets

Searching for hidden medieval stories from the island of the Sagas

Breakthrough study reveals bumetanide treatment restores early social communication in fragile X syndrome mouse model

Neuroscience leader reveals oxytocin's crucial role beyond the 'love hormone' label

Twelve questions to ask your doctor for better brain health in the new year

Microelectronics Science Research Centers to lead charge on next-generation designs and prototypes

Study identifies genetic cause for yellow nail syndrome

New drug to prevent migraine may start working right away

Good news for people with MS: COVID-19 infection not tied to worsening symptoms

Department of Energy announces $179 million for Microelectronics Science Research Centers

Human-related activities continue to threaten global climate and productivity

Public shows greater acceptance of RSV vaccine as vaccine hesitancy appears to have plateaued

Unraveling the power and influence of language

Gene editing tool reduces Alzheimer’s plaque precursor in mice

TNF inhibitors prevent complications in kids with Crohn's disease, recommended as first-line therapies

Twisted Edison: Bright, elliptically polarized incandescent light

Structural cell protein also directly regulates gene transcription

Breaking boundaries: Researchers isolate quantum coherence in classical light systems

Brain map clarifies neuronal connectivity behind motor function

Researchers find compromised indoor air in homes following Marshall Fire

Months after Colorado's Marshall Fire, residents of surviving homes reported health symptoms, poor air quality

Identification of chemical constituents and blood-absorbed components of Shenqi Fuzheng extract based on UPLC-triple-TOF/MS technology

'Glass fences' hinder Japanese female faculty in international research, study finds

Vector winds forecast by numerical weather prediction models still in need of optimization

New research identifies key cellular mechanism driving Alzheimer’s disease

Trends in buprenorphine dispensing among adolescents and young adults in the US

Emergency department physicians vary widely in their likelihood of hospitalizing a patient, even within the same facility

Firearm and motor vehicle pediatric deaths— intersections of age, sex, race, and ethnicity

[Press-News.org] Virtual assistance is confirmed as an effective tool in monitoring HIV patients
A pioneering telemedicine program in HIV patient care through the Internet