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HIGH TECH MEDICINE: PATIENT EDUCATION WITH COMPUTERS
Like doctors, patients now can play computer games to learn more about their illnesses and how to cope with them. The University of Minnesota in Minneapolis has developed a desktop system for helping patients with cystic fibrosis, a severe, often fatal lung disease. The patients’ parents also can use the computer to learn how to deal with this illness. Similar programs exist for diabetes, heart attack, sexually transmitted disease, and drug abuse. One program at the University of Minnesota will evaluate your health risks based on your lifestyle, parents’ diseases, and such factors as cholesterol levels.
In Louisville, distraught parents soon will be able to sit down at their own personal computers to get medical information instantly if their child is sick, thanks to Dr. Matthew Witten, who developed the pediatrics program there. Connected by telephone to the University of Louisville, a parent at home will type the child’s symptoms onto the computer screen. Back will come information on what to do immediately, when to see a doctor, and when, simply, to wait.
In Tucson, people can dial a phone number at the University of Arizona for a health assessment quiz to determine their risks for a particular condition. Callers can choose a quiz on one of 10 subjects, from stress to cancer. A computerized voice on the Tele-Health System asks the questions, and callers answer by tapping their touch-tone telephones. The voice then gives each caller’s risk score, based on the answers given.
Beyond these major trends, computer science is spreading widely and deeply into the medical community with new systems, either recently established or in the testing stages. For example, computers have made possible analyses of X-ray negatives so clear that pictures emerge of whole organs. Similar advances have been made with magnetic .and sound-wave probes. A doctor now can “see” a cancer that only a few years ago was not visible.
The United Network for Organ Sharing, a nationwide computer system, now directs donated organs-kidneys, hearts, livers-to the right patients with the proper match of blood and tissue.
Many drugstores and hospital pharmacies are computerized to reduce errors in prescriptions. A computerized pharmacy can spot drug conflicts, check to see whether you are overdosed, and find your prescription if you have lost it.
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