European Commission Adopted a Communication to Support and Improve Access to Telemedicine

European Commission adopted a Communication to support and improve access to telemedicine for EU citizens and healthcare professionals across Europe. In response to a call for action from Member States, this initiative aims to increase and broaden telemedicine services, including diagnosis, treatment and monitoring at a distance across Europe. Such services will allow, for example, a patient suffering from a rare retinal disease to be diagnosed in his hometown by a specialist working at a European Centre of Excellence for eye diseases located thousands of kilometres away. Patients with chronic heart failure will be able to have their disease more closely monitored and to enjoy better quality of life while staying at home. The European Commission proposes 10 actions to address the related challenges in the years to come.

"Telemedicine can radically improve chronically ill patients' quality of life and give people access to top medical expertise. It is our duty to make sure patients and health professionals can benefit from it" said Viviane Reding, EU Commissioner for Information Society and Media. "At the same time, the provision of remote healthcare services through ICT can optimise the use of scarce human and financial resources in the medical field."

EU Health Commissioner, Androulla Vassilou expressed her belief that: "Telemedicine tools can indeed deliver improvements both in quality of care and patient safety as well as increase access to healthcare. This means both better services for citizens, and more innovative and efficient health services". The key to success, Commissioner Vassiliou added, is "the full involvement of citizens, patients and health professionals".

In an ageing Europe, where more and more citizens live with chronic health diseases, telemedicine is an important tool. Despite the potential benefits that telemedicine can provide, its use is still limited in most parts of the EU.

For instance, telemedicine allows the monitoring of important health parameters (such as blood sugar levels or blood pressure) to be carried out from the patient's home, avoiding troublesome and - particularly for the sick or elderly - exhausting trips to a doctor or hospital. It can improve access to specialised treatment in remote areas where access to healthcare is difficult. It can also contribute to shortening waiting lists, for example in radiology, when reading and interpretation of medical images, such as radiographs (X-rays) or Computed Tomography (CT) scans, can be performed at a distance.

Furthermore, telemedicine, which is already a multi-billion global industry, can contribute substantially to the growth of the European economy. European industry, especially SMEs, can tap the financial and clinical benefits from this expanding market, provided that barriers to development such as market fragmentation and legal aspects are addressed.

The actions proposed by the Commission are:

1. To increase confidence and acceptance of telemedicine services among users. In particular, by encouraging provision and dissemination of scientific evidence of its effectiveness and cost effectiveness.

2. To bring legal clarity on existing EU legislation regarding telemedicine services and encourage Member States to improve provision of telemedicine services.

3. To solve technical problems such as the lack of adequate community-wide broadband infrastructure and interoperability of telemedicine devices.

This Communication defines the necessary steps to be taken by Member States, the European Commission and stakeholders including healthcare providers and the industry.

The telemedicine communication is based on an extensive consultation phase during 2007 and 2008 which involved Member States, health professionals, patients associations and industry representatives. It received strong support from all parties. Details of the consultation exercise as well as other Commission activities and studies to support research and deployment of telemedicine can be found on the relevant section of the Europa website and through the European Public Health Portal.

The adopted Communication on Telemedicine is available on:
http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/activities/
health/policy/telemedicine/index_en.htm

Related news article:

Most Popular Now

AI Tool Helps Predict Who will Benefit f…

A study led by UCLA investigators shows that artificial intelligence (AI) could play a key role in improving treatment outcomes for men with prostate cancer by helping physicians determine who...

Research Shows AI Technology Improves Pa…

Existing research indicates that the accuracy of a Parkinson's disease diagnosis hovers between 55% and 78% in the first five years of assessment. That's partly because Parkinson's sibling movement disorders...

AI in Healthcare: How do We Get from Hyp…

The Highland Marketing advisory board met to consider the government's enthusiasm for AI. To date, healthcare has mostly experimented with decision support tools, and their impact on the NHS and...

Who's to Blame When AI Makes a Medi…

Assistive artificial intelligence technologies hold significant promise for transforming health care by aiding physicians in diagnosing, managing, and treating patients. However, the current trend of assistive AI implementation could actually...

First Therapy Chatbot Trial Shows AI can…

Dartmouth researchers conducted the first clinical trial of a therapy chatbot powered by generative AI and found that the software resulted in significant improvements in participants' symptoms, according to results...

DMEA sparks: The Future of Digital Healt…

8 - 10 April 2025, Berlin, Germany. Digitalization is considered one of the key strategies for addressing the shortage of skilled workers - but the digital health sector also needs qualified...

DeepSeek: The "Watson" to Doct…

DeepSeek is an artificial intelligence (AI) platform built on deep learning and natural language processing (NLP) technologies. Its core products include the DeepSeek-R1 and DeepSeek-V3 models. Leveraging an efficient Mixture...

Stepping Hill Hospital Announced as SPAR…

Stepping Hill Hospital, part of Stockport NHS Foundation Trust, has replaced its bedside units with state-of-the art devices running a full range of information, engagement, communications and productivity apps, to...

DMEA 2025: Digital Health Worldwide in B…

8 - 10 April 2025, Berlin, Germany. From the AI Act, to the potential of the European Health Data Space, to the power of patient data in Scandinavia - DMEA 2025...