ISS brings advances in technology for telemedicine

On Thursday 5 December 2002 an ESA-coordinated demonstration in medical telediagnostics was carried out on board the French hospital ship Sirocco.
In a project initiated by ESA in association with the Department of Space Medical Physiology at the University of Tours, the Vision and Robotics Laboratory at Bourges, Sinters Toulouse, and CNES, this was the first real-time demonstration of the use of a teleoperated robotic arm for echographic diagnosis in a remote situation.

The objective of the project was to demonstrate how teleoperated
echographic diagnosis can be carried out on patients at remote locations.
A radiologist at St Anne’s Hospital in Toulon used the teleoperated
robotic arm to diagnose a test patient on board the ship stationed at sea.
With the robotic arm, videoconferencing equipment and satellite
communications, the radiologist was able to assess the severity of medical
problems from the remote site. This has important implications for
spaceflight and research as it means that astronauts on board the
international space station can receive diagnostic attention without
returning to Earth.

Medical telediagnostic research also has important implications for life
on earth. It expands the range of remote echographic diagnosis and this
can contribute significantly to the delivery of efficient medical care in
small rural hospitals in Europe where access to radiologists is
limited or in situations where second opinions are needed. Remote
echographic diagnostics also has a role to play in remote and emergency
situations such as in many parts of the third world, the polar regions and
at sea.

The project has been funded by ESA for several years as part of its
Microgravity Applications Programme and Technology Transfer Programme,
with support from the Directorate of Technical and Operations Support. It
is an example ESA’s sustained efforts to involve universities and industry
in the development of space-related research which can serve to improve
the quality of life on earth.

‘The project reflects ESA’s continued commitment to the advancement of
space science for life’, said Jörg Feustel-Büechl, ESA’s Director of Human
Spaceflight, ‘and aims to contribute to the development of further
cooperation on telemedical research among European scientific communities
and industry’.

The demonstration was carried out in conjunction with the conference on
telemedicine held in Toulon on 5 and 6 December. For specialists
interested in discussing telemedicine with project managers and
scientists, ESA is holding an Internet Forum on Thursday 12 December from
14.00 to 15.00 which can be accessed via www.esa.int/spaceflight

Read more:

http://www.esa.int/export/esaCP/ESA3DQ7708D_Improving_0.html