Technology and Technical Considerations

This page provides information on technical considerations for video consultations, including the Uniquest Report.

Page last updated: 04 May 2012

Telehealth is a new way of practising for most medical practitioners, and it presents new clinical and technological challenges.

There is a wide range of technology available to support video conferencing. While the Government is not mandating any particular technological solution for the delivery of Medicare-eligible video consultations, there is a range of material available to guide practitioners on what to consider when setting up and performing video consultations and further work is underway. The links on this page lead to a range of material that can assist practitioners to make decisions about how to approach video consulting.

Although videoconferencing is new to Medicare reimbursement video conferencing is already widely used in health, particularly within State health systems, and there is a wide range of existing technical standards that apply to video conferencing technology.

Through the Government’s consultation with the medical profession and other stakeholders on the development of the telehealth initiative, it is clear that while all medical specialties can potentially conducted consultations via video link, the specific technical requirements vary from specialty to specialty. Different types of specialist consultations can be satisfactorily performed using different types of technology, taking into account the patient’s particular medical condition, local infrastructure and patient/practitioner preferences.

It is certainly not necessary that only high-end or dedicated systems are used for video consultations, and the Government does not want to discourage the adoption of telehealth by imposing unnecessarily stringent and expensive technical requirements. The professional colleges, rather than the Government, are the appropriate bodies to set standards and promote good practice in the area of telehealth as they do for all aspects of medical practice.

In general, clinicians providing MBS billed telehealth services should be confident that the technical solution they choose is:

capable of providing sufficient video quality for the clinical service being provided; and
sufficiently secure to ensure normal privacy requirements for health information are met.

Individual clinicians will also need to be confident that the technology used is able to satisfy the item descriptor and that software and hardware used to deliver a videoconference meets the applicable laws for security and privacy.

Outside of the Medicare environment, video conferencing is already widespread and established practice in State public health systems, and there are already a number of guidelines and position statements on the clinical use of telehealth available to doctors. Some of these are referenced on this website and they can all be used to inform practitioners on the questions that should be considered when setting up and undertaking video consultations.

UniQuest


The Government engaged UniQuest Pty Ltd to provide advice and options regarding a broad range of telehealth implementations. The two Reports produced for this consultancy are provided below.

Telehealth Business Case Advice and Options (PDF 1051 KB)
Telehealth Assessment Report (PDF 831 KB)

The Telehealth Business Case, Advice and Options Report presents the business requirements for the introduction of a broad range of teleconsultations and includes technical advice and options for the implementation of video consultations.

The Telehealth Assessment Report is a comprehensive background document regarding a broad range of telehealth implementations, including video conferencing based consultations.

Further information which has been summarised from the Uniquest Report, can be found below:

Guidance on Technical Issues
Guidance on Security and Privacy