the pilot project — part of a strategy dubbed “care everywhere” — is believed to be the first of its kind in canada, although similar initiatives have been set up in the united states and europe. the goals of the project are to advance telemedicine in quebec to the next level, improve home care and reduce hospitalizations in an overburdened health network.
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“one of the things we really wanted to do for a while is introduce a virtual care program. because of the need to free up hospital beds urgently, in a safe way — not just to throw people out, to look after them safely — we accelerated our virtual care program. so we introduced (tuesday) quietly a virtual care ward where we can care for people at home, monitor their vital signs remotely.
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and throughout the covid pandemic, the jewish general has tested new technologies, some more successfully than others. for example, the hospital relied on a sophisticated artificial intelligence program by israeli software engineers to project covid-19 admissions during the first wave in 2020. that initiative was deemed a success.
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however, another pilot project involving a smartphone app using facial-recognition technology produced mixed results and never took off.