Wednesday, October 27, 2010
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professionals and institutions working for the free insurance that insurers need to be clearly defined on the use of which technologies are ready to finance and how they will do so (system billing) for the sector to invest in them. It has also become clear that both companies and their care providers need a system of accreditation of new technologies that enable them to acquire and incorporate them with the confidence that they are effective and cost-efficient, and be assured that they will invest add value to their customers.
The iron laws of data protection in Spain and the European Union accession is also slowing the ICT sector, as pointed Marta Plana, a lawyer specializing in technology companies.
Francisco José Juan Ruiz, CEO of DKV Health Insurance, has defended especially computerized and digitalized medical records, which can be accessed from anywhere in the care chain in Spain and from any country, just as happens with bank accounts. Lluis
Bachs, director of Health Insurance Fiatc also essential to create digital medical folder, the shared history and its use for second medical opinion and points out the importance of incorporating e-mediators and e-professionals companies to engage in a more agile with their customers.
AndreuObis, technical director of Health Care College, has launched a message of caution: "Internet should be explored, but who knows if in a few years there will something better." As an example, said his company invested in terminal care at home and at the widespread use, "we saw that there was a problem: the mobile phone coverage is poor in some places. I think we are forcing a bit the future."
Antoni Paredes, director of Northeastern Adeslas, no doubt about the importance of ICT, but it suggests to know very well before what you really want the bulk of the insured and frames the current debate in context: a market with strong competition, in which the insured individual is "endangered" and the collective drag prices lower. Iñaki
Peralta, CEO of Sanitas Hospital, has also been realistic: "If an area only one hospital that only works with paper, not going to stop hiring so."
Via: diariomedico.com
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