Telemedicine Grant Will Further Expand Health Care Access

September 13, 2011 — To help patients in the mid-Atlantic states access specialty care and reduce the burden of travel for health care, the University of Virginia Center for Telehealth will collaborate with a coalition of health care providers to expand telemedicine services with support from a federal grant.

This month, the center was awarded nearly $1 million by the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration to create the Mid-Atlantic Telehealth Resource Center. U.Va., in partnership with telehealth networks across the region, will link rural and urban health care providers to expand telehealth capabilities and expertise.

Building upon more than 17 years of technical and policy experience, this resource center will bring together providers in the District of Columbia and six states: Virginia, Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland, North Carolina and West Virginia.

"We are delighted that HRSA has provided us with this opportunity to share models of care provided via telehealth with our partners across the mid-Atlantic region," Dr. Karen Rheuban, director of the Center for Telehealth, said. "It will be a privilege to collaborate with distinguished institutions to further improve access to care using advanced and innovative technologies."

Through U.Va.'s telemedicine network, far-flung patients receive care provided by U.Va. physicians and other health professionals in more than 40 subspecialties. The U.Va. telemedicine network includes more than 85 locations across Virginia. Thousands of Virginians receive care annually through telemedicine, enabling them to access services not available within their own communities. U.Va. estimates that its telemedicine program has saved Virginians more than 6.7 million miles of travel for medical care, said David Cattell-Gordon, director of U.Va.'s Office of Telemedicine.

Last year, Virginia Gov. Robert F. McDonnell signed into law a bill requiring insurance companies to cover clinical services provided through telemedicine. Virginia is the only state in the mid-Atlantic region that mandates insurance coverage for telemedicine.

While telemedicine provides many benefits to rural communities, Cattell-Gordon said, patients residing in urban areas, such as the District of Columbia, are also helped. "This grant provides an opportunity to greatly expand telehealth offerings and partnerships across the mid-Atlantic region," he said.

U.Va. expects to launch the Mid-Atlantic Telehealth Resource Center in early October.

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