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Communications satellites in the national and global health care information infrastructure - Their role, impact, and issues
Author(s) -
John E. Zuzek,
K. B. Bhasin
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
16th international communications satellite systems conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.1996-993
Subject(s) - telemedicine , interoperability , usability , communications satellite , confidentiality , health informatics , telecommunications , health care , informatics , computer science , business , computer security , internet privacy , medical emergency , world wide web , medicine , engineering , political science , satellite , electrical engineering , human–computer interaction , aerospace engineering , law
Health care services delivered from a distance, known collectively as telemedicine, are being increasingly demonstrated on various transmission media. Telemedicine activities have included diagnosis by a doctor at a remote location, emergency and disaster medical assistance, medical education, and medical informatics. The ability of communications satellites to offer communication channels and bandwidth on demand, connectivity to mobile, remote and under served regions, and global access will afford them a critical role for telemedicine applications within the National and Global Information Infrastructure (NII/GII). The importance that communications satellites will have in telemedicine applications within the NII/GII the differences in requirements for NII vs. GII, the major issues such as interoperability, confidentiality, quality, availability, and costs, and preliminary conclusions for future usability based on the review of several recent trails at national and global levels are presented.

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