Opportunity for Innovation: Experiences in Implementing Telehealth Services to Enhance Access to Healthcare during COVID-19 Pandemic in Sri Lanka: A Case Study
Malith Kumarasinghe *
Epidemiology Unit, Sri Lanka.
Wedika M. Karunarathne
Postgraduate Institute of Medicine, University of Colombo, Sri Lanka.
Palitha Karunapema
Ministry of Health, Sri Lanka.
W. M. Palitha Bandara
Provincial Director of Health Services, North Central Province, Sri Lanka.
Shakira Irfaan
Postgraduate Institute of Medicine, University of Colombo, Sri Lanka.
G. D. T. Kanchana
Postgraduate Institute of Medicine, University of Colombo, Sri Lanka.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Telehealth is the delivery of health-related services and information using electronic information and communication technologies. Telehealth enables the health service providers to connect with a remote patient to provide care, advice, reminders, education, intervention, monitoring and facilitates remote admissions. Due to COVID-19 related travel restrictions, disruptions in access to healthcare were observed in Sri Lanka. Therefore, a telehealth solution to connect patients where specialist medical doctors were inaccessible or unavailable, was planned and implemented in the North Central province of Sri Lanka in 2020. The objective of this case study is to describe the experience during the planning and implementation of the telehealth intervention. Issues faced during planning and implementation were securing adequate funds, limited knowledge of information technology among the health staff, the reluctance of patients to explain and show the signs through video consultation, and difficulties faced during the allocation of responsibility at each step of the telehealth services and provision of network facilities to peripheral hospitals. These issues were overcome by creating awareness among the key stakeholders on telehealth and its advantages, addressing concerns of the patients and conducting awareness campaigns on telehealth, streamlining the maintenance of equipment and most importantly, addressing concerns of the administrators, including health officials, and obtaining their consensus for the implementation of telehealth services. If these key issues can be forecasted and addressed timely, telehealth services could be successfully implemented in a resource-limited country like Sri Lanka.
Keywords: Telehealth, primary care, Sri Lanka, COVID-19