December 19, 2003
Video visits help cure hospital homesickness
Northern
Health goes the distance to make patients feel at home
JANE GEORGE
Even though they were in Edmonton, this week Darlene
Quqshuun and Warren Rudolf personally introduced friends
and family back home in Gjoa Haven to their newborn
twin sons, Byron and Bailey.
This special holiday meeting was made possible due
to tele-health equipment in Edmonton and Gjoa Haven,
and telecommunications technology that uses satellites
to send images and sound between the two sites.
The set-up, which is generally reserved for long-distance
medical consultations, allowed the couple and their
sons in Edmonton and those sitting in Gjoa Havens
clinic to see and hear each other on television screens.
Its a visit, said Liz Kingan, a
nurse and member of the Northern Health Services team
in Edmonton.
Edmontons Northern Health Services tracks patients
from Nunavut when theyre undergoing treatment
or have been admitted to one of the citys seven
hospitals. The team also relays updates and discharge
plans to health workers back home.
From April 2002 to March 2003, Kingan and her two
colleagues all of whom have experience in northern
nursing stations looked after 133 in-patients
and 301 outpatients from Nunavut.
Most of those receiving medical treatment in Edmonton
come from the Kitikmeot region, although many infants
from other places in Nunavut who need heart surgery
are also referred to Edmonton.
Nunavut maintains a boarding home in Edmonton, and
the territorys health travel service alerts Northern
Health Services when anyone is due to arrive from Nunavut
and will require lodging or hospitalization.
We do see all the in-patients, and we try to
meet all of them and make sure they know whats
available, Kingan said.
But Kingan said those travelling on company or government
health plans for treatment in Edmonton sometimes dont
realize that the health services are also available
to them.
Northern Health Services can provide advice, counselling
and even help arrange discounts at hotels in Edmonton.
We can help you navigate the maze, Kingan
said. Most of us never look at our health coverage
until we have to and then you can find out something
isnt covered.
Visits via video-conferencing are offered after a
patient has been in Edmonton for more than three weeks.
Kingan said she usually leaves the patients alone
during these meetings.
Its very emotional, she said
and its not unusual to see people cry and kiss
the television screens.
Each visit costs around $500 but its positive
impact on patients health and happiness makes
the hour well worth the expense.
We find people from the North, the first thing
they ask is, When can I go home? They dont
like it here, they dont want to be here and theyre
homesick and lonely, she said.
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