The following is an excerpt of the original DALLAS INNOVATES article published on July 18, 2017 by DAVE MOORE.
Go to Original ArticleWith Telemed Law in Effect, Plano Firm Launches 3-D Telepresence Doctor Visits
TelePresence Tech takes the online video call concept another step, melding more than a dozen American and European patents to tap into the workings of the mind.
What visitors actually see is a 3-D hologram of TelePresence Tech Director of Operations Jonathan Varrassi. In the blink of an eye, the image of Varrassi can change into a giant, 3-D beating heart (or a host of other images), allowing medical professionals to explain their patients’ medical conditions at the most granular level, from nearly anywhere else on the globe.
These visions are a herald of
Texas’ new telemed law (SB 1107),
which took effect on July 1.
Telemedicine — medical visits through a secured online video call — increases health
care options for consumers, sparing them visits or even cross-country treks to health
care providers’ offices. SB1107 created the legal framework for establishing a medical
practitioner/patient relationship, via telemedicine. The passage of that bill allows the
practice of telemed statewide without an in-person visit, expanding the legal use of the
technology.
TelePresence Tech takes the online video call concept another step, melding more than
a dozen American and European patents to tap into the workings of the mind:
EYE CONTACT IS KEY ELEMENT OF TELEPRESENCE TECH
The crucial element to all this is eye contact, the way the technology’s inventor and TelePresence CEO Duffie White sees things. Opponents to telemed in Texas have argued that physicians couldn’t properly examine patients without a face-to-face, in-person visit. White cites studies that show the eye contact between doctors and patients — specifically, the eye contact his invention allows — as being crucial in assuring that patients are literally focused on the medical advice they’re receiving, and whether they will adhere to those instructions. In turn, physicians using White’s invention take part in a face-to-face evaluation, for better diagnosis and determination for treatment.
In the 85th session, legislators heard testimony from a variety of heath-care providers and business advocates, such as Texas Association of Business representative Amanda Martin, who said a survey of 600 Texans showed that 70 percent would prefer using telemedicine for handling common medical conditions. Many in the survey reported that they use emergency rooms as a last resort for medical care. The tech White and others are developing counters two downsides of conventional medicine: expense (the U.S. now spends more than $10,000 per capita annually on health care) and unintended consequences (preventable hospital errors are the third leading cause of death in the U.S. ).
HOLOGRAPHICAL REALITY PORTAL PUTS DOC IN THE ROOM
White’s most-recent patent creates a telehealth exam room, where patients can interact
with a health-care provider appearing life-size in the room while being transmitted from
a medical center anywhere in the world. The aforedescribed “Holographical Reality
Portal” is on display at Telepresence Tech’s Plano facility.
TelePresence Tech has installed hundreds of telepresence units in the U.S. and 30
other countries for uses ranging from financial services to teaching (and health care).
The passage of SB 1107 opens the door further for expansion into Texas.
“In the era of telemedicine consults, there is no reason to wait weeks for an
appointment,” cardiologist and professor of molecular medicine Eric Topol wrote in a
recent essay in the Wall Street Journal. “For the same copay as an office visit,
connection with a doctor can occur instantly or within minutes.”