The Future of Rural Healthcare | Dr. Harry Wilkins III | TEDxQuincy
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- Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
- Dr. Harry Wilkins III explores exciting and titanic shifts in medicine and technology that will shape the future of rural healthcare delivery.
Dr. Harry Wilkins III is a native of Illinois and a practicing trauma surgeon on staff at Blessing Hospital in Quincy. He completed his medical school and surgical residency training at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and completed a trauma fellowship at R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center in Baltimore, MD.
After practicing for several years in Texas, Kansas and Missouri, Dr. Wilkins then completed a Master’s Degree in Health Care Management from Harvard University’s T. H. Chan school of public health before joining Quincy Medical Group in 2010. Dr. Wilkins has received the HRSA medal of honor for his role as co-faculty of the HRSA-sponsored Organ Donation and Transplant Breakthrough collaboratives and serves as the current administrative medical director for Midwest Transplant Network in Kansas City. Dr. Wilkins is also the medical advisor-elect for AOPO, is widely published in medical literature and is a member of numerous medical societies. Dr. Harry Wilkins III is a native of Illinois and a practicing trauma surgeon on staff at Blessing Hospital here in Quincy. He completed his medical school and surgical residency training at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and completed a trauma fellowship at R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center in Baltimore, MD.
After practicing for several years in Texas, Kansas and Missouri, Dr. Wilkins then completed a Master’s Degree in Health Care Management from Harvard University’s T. H. Chan school of public health before joining Quincy Medical Group in 2010. Dr. Wilkins has received the HRSA medal of honor for his role as co-faculty of the HRSA-sponsored Organ Donation and Transplant Breakthrough collaboratives and serves as the current administrative medical director for Midwest Transplant Network in Kansas City. Dr. Wilkins is also the medical advisor-elect for AOPO, is widely published in medical literature and is a member of numerous medical societies. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at www.ted.com/tedx
Crazy how this world is global , French Health care is very different than US health care BUT both are facing the same problem medical desertification , HEALTH can t be a BUSINESS HEALTH is PUBLIC GOOD no profits with HEALTH in a FREE democratic WORLD ! HEALTH CARE MUST BE A PUBLIC SERVICE in a democratic world !
Holographic’s over rural internet bandwidth.....this scenario has failed
Starlink bud....
Very innovative idea but lacks one major aspect in my opinion....
Physical examination of the patient by the Doctor is fundamental in every interaction..... ur system doesn’t take this into consideration.... many diagnoses are made from history of the patient,physical examination and laboratory investigations.... needless to say removing physical examination would lead to misdiagnosis in certain situations
Can't wait for drones to deliver and administrate suppositories, that'll be fun
Quick Fix - Thought Provoking Videos And is
Drones are quite good at delivering blood conserves between rural hospitals (one place in Africa, in the USA donated blood routinely go's bad).
Love this idea! Plus not going to medical facility or pharmacy, where a lot of sick people are, we would have less opportunities to get exposed to more illnesses...Yes!
@@catherinekittykat
...thought personal delivery and obligatory usage instructions are a safety measure that needs to be recreated or surpassed.
You are very hilarious
"Please state the nature of the medical emergency."
This is a great idea BUT I think the foundation is off. The attitude to healthcare in USA needs to change from being for profit to a social service. Even if we managed to use telehealth and other advanced technologies, healthcare systems would still be geared towards profit and find a way to increase the patient load for providers/caregivers, isn’t that what happened with electronic medical records? They were supposed to increase access to care, save time, and be more time efficient. But they further separated provider from patient, dehumanized patients, and increased healthcare cost. Healthcare providers, nurses, pharmacists should be given free education. But the salary should be reasonable like in other countries. Nurses should be paid more, because they do the brunt of the work physical/mental labor. Physicians should be paid less, because a doctor should not be focused on meeting quotas in order to make profit or meet hospital demands. Problem with the medical profession now is that too many individuals get into healthcare for the money making potential, that has got to change.
I don’t think people r paid in the world based on what they do but the problems they can solve... based on that alone a physician would always earn more than a nurse... also physicians do a whole lot I don’t know about the ones u see but as a practicing physician I can say I work more than the nurse in my hospital who work in shifts btw... Nothing against nurses though they r closer to the patients in reality n r a very fundamental n core sector of any health sector
@@wilfredekokobe6230 some may argue that today’s current western medical model actually causes more problems than actually solving them. As the leaders in healthcare based on current stats your profession is not doing too well in problem solving. Based on your premise you should be the least paid. The problem with the current medical model is mainly focusing on diagnosis and treatment. The human element/holistic focus is not emphasized. Physicians spend less and less time with their patients, which leads to poor outcomes. Most physicians try to see more patients in less time, which ultimately reduces the quality of healthcare. As leaders in healthcare it is unacceptable. Medical school should be free for this reason and a physician wage should be much less because they get the privilege to serve the public. People who go into medicine for money need to be weeded out for this reason. So we have more true healers and people who care about their patients. Rather than doctors who don’t know who their patients are, who bully staff, and only care about their bottom line.
@@indigogirl5172 great points 🙂
But sorry I’ll have to come back on ur concept.... I’m sentimental about u talking about cutting physicians wages n giving them free education because I have worked in the developing countries n that’s exactly how their health care plan is
Doctors r paid about a third of what Doctors receive in the western world n free medical school is used as the excuse for that...
what r the results??? Check out the statistics for urself... healthcare in developing countries r way worse than in the west... ofcourse such a scheme isn’t the only reason y the health system in developing countries r fragile but as someone who has worked in the system I can tell u it contributes massively!
I hope we can both agree that ur model can’t be the solution...
In reality I think the solution to improving health care is much more sophisticated n requires a lot of stakeholders n parties putting in reforms n efforts to address n correct ills in the practice...
One of such reforms could be making sure more Doctors r trained so they could see less patients n spend more time on each individual patient...
But I sincerely agree with ur analysis on the focused diagnostic n treatment approach most of us do now a days.
that sounds really interesting nevertheless i fail to see how blood tests can be automated like this? for blood tests to be conducted one needs venous blood not capillary and specific reactants (some of which need days to show a result as is the case for tsh). Maybe there have been a few changes in between as I got my medical degree a few years ago but surely it is not as simple. Other than that telemedicine is and should be the way forward towards providing healthcare in super remote areas
I like the optimism
But he threw everything plus the kitchen sink in here… technology development doesn’t work that way
Hmmmm sounds like Theranos. Wasn’t that so egregiously false people went to jail?
This requires less government intervention and more freedom for healthcare and insurance companies.
Great Sr ❤️❤️
My channel is also growing ❤️❤️
Thanks ❤️❤️
This Chanel is very useful to learn English
Unfortunately, we don't currently have the necessary legislative protections in place, to make this a viable option. There are too many ways your personal information could be abused without legal recourse.
Doctors serve a system first, not the patient. This guy is spot on.
Here's how I see it and this is only my opinion. I have not had medical insurance in many years. I have had to see the doctor just a handful of times because I can't afford it. I understand doctors are highly educated and I have a huge college bill to pay after their education however it's not my responsibility to pay for their education. If they choose to be a doctor so be it. But that doesn't mean they have the right to put a Stranglehold on people to pay to get well. Remember this is just my opinion. Holograph doctors drones flying and medication to you this is really really advanced stuff you're talking. So my thinking is before you start adding in all this extra Labyrinth stuff for a doctor that shows to be a doctor why not simplify. Let's get back to the basics let's get rid of the medication that's killing us and causing more diseases. Let's go back to being able to sue the pharmaceutical companies for killing us. If we do that the cost of seeing a doctor in my opinion would go down in price. Then we wouldn't have to worry about flying drones loaded with medication to our front door because we want, we want, we want! Our society needs to go back to a simpler time which we could do. But to go ahead and nursemaid people because they want right then and there is utterly ridiculous. Simplify people simplify. Just my opinion and I'm only one out of billions on this planet. Just a little simplification for thought
Bailey Dillion Indeed. This sounds like an absurd work-around so that everybody keeps pulling in the $$... and the patient is left out altogether!
Good
I love you Mary!!! 💓🙋THANKYOU for all that you do! I appreciate you! I pray YOU are getting better and i pray that you have a healthy recovery!🙏🙌🔝God Bless you!
YES
High quality TED 🙂
Great video thumbs up great one I like so much 💕💕💕
🇧🇷 Tendi nada.. não manjo dos ingreis
I live in a smaller town in Wyoming. There are no primary care physicians in the area taking new patients that I can find. I’ve given up trying to receive primary care type services, such as check ups and screenings. Hello Dr. Google I guess.
Amazing @@@@@@@@
I truly hope everything you predict comes true.
This is excellent and so timely!
Insurance is bad to be sure but the business side of healthcare providers themselves is horrible as well. Rural healthcare in Minnesota is through clinics that all have the words Mayo Clinic stamped on them-this doesn't come with any of the state-of-the-art medical care from the actual Mayo in Rochester. It's an in name only type of deal. The predominate provider is the nurse practitioner not a doctor.
They should let paramedics work as community paramedics in conjunction with the doctors. We can do the majority of those test in her own home.
One problem is the privacy codes. One dr's office usually do not certify another to look at your binary medical records.
That's just a fact.
Ensurerance isn't the problem, administration might be.
Urban ride sharing isn't a good example as those drivers and rides are less save for everyone involved.
Why only till 240P??
they also have 144p
Your first scenario described my life magnified seeing 5 specialist...i would love the second scenario plus I would have a couple extra dollars for all the money I spend on gas. Doctors are not personable these days either!
Having dealt with quite a few doctors in a number of countries as far as I'm concerned the best step forward is getting rid of the human doctor and replacing it with AI.
*Time is a great teacher, but unfortunately it kills all its pupils.. :)*
Love that; Truth is Awesome
I currently live in rural America & think that this would be a welcome change to our healthcare! I'm curious if this would include homeopathic & naturopath doctors. Also, how do I sign up to be a beta tester?
Rural health care will become electronically based through telemedicine.
telemedicine could be an help but it will never replace the touch and eye of a human !
No way American health insurance will ever like to risk there stocks
You need this democratically available for the people sake
Suggestions
Hack China steal big Data and of course an optical based quantum computer with artificial intelligence
With organiods on demand
Go to health department or faith based clinics. Good people with ability to refer and pay on sliding scale or grants. Or you might get Medicaid. Health is most important.
The issue is access. In rural areas, there just are not clinics or health departments that are close enough or have hours that work for people. My closest hospital (and clinic) is 1/2 an hour away. My closest trauma center is an hour away. And I am BARELY rural. Many places in our large country are much farther away. However, someone upline did have an excellent perspective that the rural internet speeds are miserable. Like I had 10 years ago, if they access at all. But it is all much closer than one might expect-the drone delivery was the first not-currently-in-use tech (besides holographic MDs, but mentally I subbed Facetime.)
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Video and audio quality are really bad
Alt yazı neden tok
the future of healthcare is John Sarno
Ohhh não tem legenda????
🤩🤩
“In most industries..” “in most stores...” no sources?
this guy talks about something in the 20 or 30 years future,
which wont help anyone for the time being.
Great vision. Unfortunately still 40+ yrs away from viability.
Nurse practitioners need independent practice in all states. Physicians are happy to occupy high income practices, and happy to let NPs practice with no oversight in rural areas (where they don’t want to live and can’t make as much $$... no judgement) research has shown that the quality of care NPs provide is equal to physician care. Often with higher patient satisfaction. Not to mention having the human relationship between health care provider and patient has been found to be therapeutic.
Now that, my information thirsty friends, is why I have not taken any medication in pretty much my whole life.
I'm 26 now and I strongly believe that taking medication actually hurts my immune system.
Making things easier for my body is probably the worst thing I could do.
Our Immune system needs training too.
Our body has to be capabale of certain tasks and if we take them away from them, we might all end up as weaklings.
So don't take drugs if you have some headaches and just wait out a simple cold.
It is going to go away if your body can handle it and if not, well, take some meds.
But don't take them if you don't have to for fucks sake.
Amen.
Worst
1st
god that was so boring!