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    Navy Medicine supports Guam civilian hospital with tele-health

    NMCSD’s JTCCN Provides Remote Support

    Photo By Petty Officer 2nd Class Luke Cunningham | 200917-N-LW757-1003 SAN DIEGO (Sept. 17, 2020) Trisha Lindsey, a nurse specialist...... read more read more

    SAN DIEGO, CA, UNITED STATES

    10.08.2020

    Story by Regena Kowitz 

    Naval Medical Center San Diego

    For the U.S. territory of Guam in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, the isolation can be challenging when you want to call for help. The U.S. Naval Hospital there is part of the emergency response network and accepts emergent cases on a regular basis if they are the closest hospital. But when more expertise is needed, Naval Medical Center San Diego (NMCSD) stepped in to provide tele-critical care (TCC) assistance across the distance.

    The Department of Defense’s (DoD) first-ever telemedicine tasking for Defense Support of Civil Authorities or DSCA, began with a request from the hospital through the government of Guam to the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). FEMA requested telemedicine support for their medical operations in Guam because the number of critically ill COVID-19 patients in Guam exceeded both the number of available intensive care units (ICU) beds and the ability of on-site providers with critical care expertise to care for these patients. The civilian hospital had well-trained medical professionals, but requested the extra expertise in critical care to ensure they were providing the best care possible to their patients amid a late summer surge in COVID-19 cases island wide.

    While the use of telemedicine and virtual health (VH) have become hallmarks of patient care delivery during the pandemic, with both military and civilian providers significantly increasing options for virtual health care, this is the first-ever DoD tasking for telemedicine support in response to a request from civil authorities for aid.

    “We were able to rapidly engage our expertise to support the hospital in Guam,” said Navy Capt. Konrad Davis, director of the Join Tele-Critical Care Network (JTCCN) for the Military Health System (MHS) and a Navy pulmonary and critical care physician at NMCSD. “Normally we deploy people and those people, along with the correct equipment and supplies create a capability. However, we now have the ability to leverage information and communication technologies to extend health care expertise. We now have the ability to provide a virtual health capability.”

    Davis and his team started providing support to a civilian hospital in Guam in early September, leveraging novel software developed and funded by the DoD and the Department of Health and Human Services. The software, developed under the National Emergency Telecritical Care Network (NETCCN) project, is cyber-secure, compliant with patient privacy regulations, and can be accessed with a smartphone, tablet, or desktop computer.

    NETCCN makes it possible for the Navy’s tele-critical care physicians and nurses to reach across the ocean and consult with on-site providers in Guam, many of whom are general practitioners and do not normally care for critically ill patients. Using the software, providers at both locations can securely communicate in real-time via instant chat or video messages, send pictures or video to each other, and share vital information such as lab results, radiology images, or electrocardiograms.

    Davis’ team usedthe technology to helpthe providers in Guam manage critically ill patients requiring interventions such as mechanical ventilation, high-flow oxygen for acute respiratory failure, medication administration to support adequate blood pressure, or treatment for shock with active organ failure.

    “Our nurses have been performing, on average, eight to 16 calls with Guam per 12-hour shift,” said Davis. “Our physicians typically respond to anywhere between two and 20 calls per shift. We are providing physician support mostly at night in Guam, but nurse support has been active 24/7.”

    The tele-critical care program at NMCSD was launched in 2014 and has grown considerably over the years, according to Davis.

    “Many years ago, we in the Department of Defense recognized that critical care is not defined by geography or the location of a patient,” Davis said. “It is defined by the patient’s condition wherever they may be. We may have critical care patients not just in a hospitals but also, because we are the military, located on a ship or in a deployed setting. We coined the phrase ‘tele-critical care’ instead of ‘tele-ICU’ to recognize the need to extend this expertise outside of traditional ICU settings.”

    Davis added that NMCSD is the DoD lead for the Joint Tele-Critical Care Network and will be the primary tele-critical care hub in the future for providing on-demand, high-acuity synchronous VH support for both traditional, in-garrison ICU beds, and the operational space, which includes support of DSCA or humanitarian assistance missions.

    “We are really just at the beginning of realizing what is possible,” Davis said. “We have a current capability that supports just under a dozen hospitals. As a result of collaboration with the Army and Air Force, and through the Defense Health Agency’s sponsorship and funding, we are working to expand the tele-critical care program to the entire MHS.”

    Naval Medical Forces Pacific (NMFP) has oversight of 11 Navy Medicine Readiness and Training Commands located on the West Coast and throughout the Pacific Rim that train, man, and equip medical forces, primarily in military treatment facilities, including the one in Guam.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 10.08.2020
    Date Posted: 10.09.2020 15:15
    Story ID: 380537
    Location: SAN DIEGO, CA, US

    Web Views: 287
    Downloads: 0

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