1 / 23

Native People for Cancer Control Telehealth Network

Native People for Cancer Control Telehealth Network. Roy Colven Cara Towle Lisa R Thomas HollyAnna Pinkham March 12, 2007. Native People for Cancer Control Telehealth Network (NPCCTN): Overall Goal. To reduce the gap between American Indians/Alaska Natives and other groups in cancer care

tala
Download Presentation

Native People for Cancer Control Telehealth Network

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Native People for Cancer Control Telehealth Network Roy Colven Cara Towle Lisa R Thomas HollyAnna Pinkham March 12, 2007

  2. Native People for Cancer Control Telehealth Network (NPCCTN): Overall Goal • To reduce the gap between American Indians/Alaska Natives and other groups in cancer care • To improve the results of cancer treatment in American Indians and Alaska Natives • To support Native cancer survivors, their health care providers, and their families

  3. NPCCTN Funding • Office for the Advancement of Telehealth (Health Resources and Services Administration) • $250,000 per year x 3 years

  4. NPCCTN Partners • South Puget Sound Intertribal Planning Agency • Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium • Individual Tribes and their communities • University of Washington • Seattle Cancer Care Alliance • University of Washington Medicine • Children’s Hospital and Regional Medical Center • Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

  5. NPCCTN Collaborations • Tribal Councils • Tribal organizations • Tribal Health Care Clinics • Urban Indian Health Care Facilities, e.g., Alaska Native Medical Center, Alaska Federal Health Care Access Network, Seattle Indian Health Board • Cancer treatment facilities • NCI-funded Cancer Information Service • Washington State Comprehensive Cancer Control Steering Committee

  6. Telemedicine • The use of electronic information and communications technologies to provide and support health care when distance separates the participants.” IOM 1996

  7. Telehealth Telehealth encompasses a broader definition of remote healthcare that does not always involve clinical services. • Videoconferencing • Transmission of still images • E-health including patient portals • Remote monitoring of vital signs • Continuing medical education • Nursing call centers • … are all considered part of telemedicine and telehealth. American Telemedicine Association http://www.americantelemed.org/

  8. NPCCTN Activities • Utilize telehealth technologies to provide education and consultative services and support to cancer patients and their providers: • Comprehensive Care Plans • Pain related to cancer • Psychological issues related to cancer, including support group creation • Legal issues related to cancer diagnosis and end-of life issues • End of life care and planning

  9. NPCCTN Activities • Facilitating virtual tumor board participation • Supporting patient referrals and returns coordination • Sharing educational resources between academic, clinical care, and tribal partners, such as continuing education and training • Continuous evaluation of services to determine value, satisfaction and impact

  10. NPCCTN Staff • Dedra Buchwald, MD, Principle Investigator • Roy Colven, MD, Co-Investigator/Project Director • Cara Towle, RN, Project Manager and Technical Liaison • HollyAnna Pinkham (Yakama), Community Outreach Specialist for Washington • Lisa R Thomas, PhD (Tlingit), Research Scientist and Community Outreach Specialist for Alaska • Rande Gray, Technical Specialist Deborah Friedman, MD, Consultant in Care of Cancer Survivors • Fransing Daisy, PhD (Cree), Mental Health Consultant • Ron Whitener, JD PhD (Squaxin Island), Legal Consultant • Anajana Kundu, MD, Pain Consultant • Ardith Doorenbos, PhD RN, End of Life Consultant • George Guilmet, PhD, Program Evaluation

  11. NPCCTN in Washington • Prospective participants: SPIPA tribes + Quinault • Next steps: • Meet with individual tribes • Understand needs at each partner site • Determine which NPCCTN services may benefit each partner site • Determine technical needs • Tribal resolution at each partner site • Collaboratively establish NPCCTN service protocols

  12. NPCCTN in Washington: Technical Plans • K-20 Educational Telecommunications Network • 48 Public Baccalaureate sites • 71 Community/Technical Colleges • 307 K-12 sites • 65 Library sites (proposed) • 15 Private Baccalaureate sites (proposed)

  13. NPCCTN in Washington: Technical Plans • Benefits of K-20 Network membership • Provides significant bandwidth for a fraction of commercial costs for all rural sites. • Allows access to K-20 bridge for multi-point conferences. • Provides toll-free calling within network or to Seattle area. • Open network allows out of system calls. • Result: Increased sustainability beyond grant funding.

  14. Alaska NPCCTN updates

  15. Alaska Partners • CANCER IS THE LEADING CAUSE OF DEATH FOR ALASKA NATIVES • 229 federally recognized Tribes • 16% of the population • 60% live in small remote communities generally without connection to a road system • Needs and resource assessment

  16. Meeting with our Alaska partners • January 2007 • Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium • Alaska Native Health Research • Alaska Native Medical Center • Alaska Federal Health Care Access Network • American Cancer Society, Alaska

  17. Alaska Native Health Care • Alaska Tribal Health System • Village-based clinics • Regional hospitals • Sub-regional clinics • Alaska Native Medical Center • Contract care (Seattle) • ANTHC is the largest Tribal self-governance entity in the US • Telehealth is recognized as an essential component to health care in Alaska

  18. NPCCTN and Alaska – service providers • Virtual tumor boards • CME for service providers • Training for community health aides • Coordinate transfer of cancer patients between Alaska and Seattle • Follow-up care for patients in the bush • Survivorship care • Palliative care • Support groups

  19. Next steps • Meet with Community Health Aids • Meet with regional and sub-regional clinics • Meet with village clinics • Meet with Alaska Native cancer patients and their families

  20. Gunalchéesh

More Related