Sehat Kahani launches new technology to aid hospitals

Leveraging their existing expertise in telemedicine solutions. It comprises e-health clinics in low-income communities and a mobile application for the masses. Sehat Kahani has now introduced Tele-ICU technology to its platform.

Together with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP); the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA); the Health Services Academy, and the Ministry of Health; Sehat Kahani has launched the first of its kind Tele-ICU project which will enable critical care specialists. It provides virtual advice in public and private intensive care units (ICUs) across Pakistan, an official statement said.

According to PMA

According to the president of the Pakistan Medical Association (PMA), the country currently has only 50 to 70 critical care specialists. They cater to the needs of a population of 200 million people.

Most of these intensivists are concentrated in major cities of the country. This project will allow doctors in ICUs to connect with Critical Care Consultants and Registrars virtually 24/7.

Virtual and on-site training

The initial pilot will induct 60 ICUs across Sindh, Punjab, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P), and Balochistan. Virtual and on-site training will be conducted with the ICU staff. Initial cohorts of training were conducted in Islamabad, Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK), and Lahore to kick off the pilot.

Inadequate Health Care Systems

Aliona Niculita, the Resident Representative UNDP, said: “The UNDP has partnered with Sehat Kahani to launch the Tele-ICU project. Its aim is to increase the capacity of healthcare providers working in public and private ICUs across Pakistan. With a limited number of Critical Care Consultants in the country. This intervention will allow improved patient care particularly for those residing in far-flung areas. Where healthcare systems are inadequate. This project is not only an effort to build a more equitable and resilient society. It will also contribute to UNDP’s goal of improving the lives of the people of Pakistan.”

Dr. Bakhtior Kadirov, the deputy representative UNFPA, said that enabling young female doctors to work from home and pairing them with newly-trained health care providers will strengthen the capacity of the existing health care system to facilitate the delivery of reproductive health services to women and girls in hard to reach areas.

The current Covid-19 pandemic has reversed the positive trends in all maternal and child health indicators in recent weeks which calls for targeted interventions to ensure the health of mothers and children. Such innovative platforms like Sehat Kahani will support the availability of critical lifesaving maternal health services to women and girls in need.

BASIC

Dr. Shahzad Ali Khan, the head of Department Public Health, Health Services Academy, said that the HSA in collaboration with ADB, WHO, and the Ministry of NHSRC developed “Basic Assessment & Support in Intensive Care (BASIC)” course to train 4,500 doctors, nurses, and paramedics.

“With the addition of Tele-ICUs in Pakistan’s existing Intensive Care Units, we look forward to improved patient outcomes, heightened quality of care, and decreased length of stay, while reducing the risk of burnout to our bedside critical care teams. We are indebted to the MOH, HSA, and UNDP for their support and trust in Sehat Kahani,” said Dr. Sara Saeed Khurram, CEO of Sehat Kahani.

Dr. Iffat Zafar, the co-founder of Sehat Kahani, in her message said: “It was a privilege to meet exceptional doctors and frontline health workers at the training, who are diligently working to improve the health outcomes for AJK with scarce resources. Integration of the Tele-ICU project in such areas can augment the resilient efforts of our healthcare professionals; meanwhile physically improving overall healthcare outcomes.”