• DocumentCode
    1434477
  • Title

    On the integration of healthcare emergency systems in Europe: the WETS project case study

  • Author

    Beltrame, Francesco ; Maryni, Piergiulio ; Orsi, Giorgio

  • Author_Institution
    DIST, Genoa Univ., Italy
  • Volume
    2
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    1998
  • fDate
    6/1/1998 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    89
  • Lastpage
    97
  • Abstract
    The European Union (EU) is characterized by a large number of different emergency healthcare (EHC) systems. In this situation, a common policy for healthcare emergency handling is largely prevented and is a cause of an increase of the costs associated with such systems all over Europe. There is, hence, a need for a homogenization and integration of healthcare emergency systems in Europe. This turns out to be difficult because of the ethical, political, legal, and technological differences and peculiarities of the European scenario and the large investments that would be needed in this sector. The process of integration passes through the identification of the main functionalities-driven by the user needs in their real life conditions-along with the technologies that are best fitted for supporting them. In this paper, several aspects related to these problems are analyzed and a real case study, drawn from the project "Worldwide Emergency Telemedicine Services" (WETS), supported by the European Commission (DG-XIII), is presented. Within WETS, several pilot sites (in Italy, Spain, Greece, Denmark, and Iceland) consider different aspects of the integration of healthcare emergency systems with particular focus on the sharing of solutions that "traditionally" belong to different environments (i.e., land, air, and sea). The involvement of important hospitals, ship companies, airlines, and emergency health institutions allows us to devote a large part of this two-year project (1998-1999) to validate and demonstrate the results of the development phase in real-life conditions. Some more concrete details are given for the Italian pilot site, where the authors operate.
  • Keywords
    costing; emergency services; medical computing; multimedia systems; Europe; European Commission; European Union; WETS project; Worldwide Emergency Telemedicine Services; case study; costs; ethics; healthcare emergency systems; investments; legal issues; multimedia; politics; technological difference; user needs; Concrete; Costs; Europe; Hospitals; Investments; Law; Legal factors; Marine vehicles; Medical services; Telemedicine; Emergency Medical Services; European Union; Organizational Case Studies; Systems Integration;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Information Technology in Biomedicine, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1089-7771
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/4233.720527
  • Filename
    720527