System Safety in Healthcare

Healthcare Reliability and Safety Improvements with Telemedicine

Authors

  • Dev Raheja
  • Maria C. Escano, M.D.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.56094/jss.v55i2.42

Keywords:

telemedicine, patient safety, healthcare

Abstract

The field of telemedicine has transformed over the years. Its use has expanded beyond the care of patients in remote and rural areas to its many other current applications. It has allowed access to specialists who are not available otherwise. The telemedicine platform has expanded, and its impact is growing in the ever-evolving health care environment.

Author Biographies

Dev Raheja

Mr. Dev Raheja has been a System Safety and System Reliability Engineering consultant for over 25 years. His range of consulting encompasses transportation systems, electric power systems, high tech industry, aerospace, defense systems, medical systems, and consumer products. He has conducted training in several countries including Sweden, Australia, Japan, UK, Turkey, Germany, Poland, Singapore, Brazil, South Africa, and Canada. He has done training and consulting work with NASA, U.S. Army, GM, Boeing, Eaton, Nissan Aerospace, Litton, General Dynamics, ITT, BAE Systems, Lockheed-Martin, Harley-Davidson, and United Technologies.

Prior to consulting, Mr. Raheja worked at General Electric, Cooper Industries, and at Booz-Allen & Hamilton. He is the author of several books including Assurance Technologies Principles and Practices (Second Edition, Wiley 2006), and Design for Reliability (Wiley, 2012). A Fellow of the System Safety Society, he has a received Scientific Achievement Award and the Educator-of the-Year Award from the society.

Mr. Raheja serves on the Patient and Families Advisory Council at Johns Hopkins Hospital as a patient safety advocate. He is Associate Editor for Healthcare Safety for The Journal of System Safety and an Associate Professor at University of Maryland where he teaches the “Design For Reliability” course which includes design for safety and trustworthiness.

Maria C. Escano, M.D.

Dr. Maria C. Escano completed her medical degree at University of Miami School of Medicine. She received her post-graduate training at Columbia University/New York Presbyterian Hospital in New York City and St. Agnes Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland. She completed her advanced trauma surgery fellowship at R. Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center at the University of Maryland.

She has been a regular contributor to scholarly journals for many years and has presented across the country on various topics advocating systems and patient safety initiatives. Dr. Escano is also an extensive traveler, having forged friendships across six continents.

References

Bennani, Othmani M., S. Diouny and O. Boumalif. "The Application of a Telemedicine Management System: The Case of a Moroccan Hospital Unit," National Institutes of Health, Fall 2012. https://doi.org/10.1080/10400435.2012.659797 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/10400435.2012.659797

Wilson, Katie. "The Doctor Will See You Now - Tips for Using Telemedicine," Mid-Atlantic Permanente Medi-cal Group, https://mydoctor.kaiserpermanente.org/mas/news/blog/telemedicine, retrieved August 8, 2019.

"10 Pros and Cons of Telemedicine," eVisit.com, https://evisit.com/resources/10-pros-and-cons-of-telemedicine, retrieved May 25, 2018.

"A Faster Pathway to Medical Licensure," Interstate Medical Licensure Compact, https://imlcc.org, retrieved August 8, 2019.

Healthcare

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Published

2019-10-01

How to Cite

Raheja, D., & Escano, M. (2019). System Safety in Healthcare: Healthcare Reliability and Safety Improvements with Telemedicine. Journal of System Safety, 55(2), 8–9. https://doi.org/10.56094/jss.v55i2.42