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Virtual OPD brings relief to covid patients

Virtual OPD brings relief to covid patients

The initiative is driven by a group of non-profit organisations, doctors and technology partners under the guidance of the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) A virtual Out Patient Department (OPD) is now open for COVID-19 patients nationwide, free of charge called www.medicsetu.org. The initiative, driven by a group of non-profit organisations, doctors and technology partners under the guidance of the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY), is now live. Companies driving this initiative include: Rotary Club Of India, Aarogya India Foundation, Manav Mitra NGO and supported by Technology Partners like MySenior Doctors, I-Novate and Avaya. The video consultation service, based on Avaya’s collaboration app, Avaya Spaces, is used by more than 1000 volunteer doctors across the nation. I-Novate customised the solution to enable doctors and patients to connect directly in secure and private virtual rooms. Keeping the urgency in mind, this app was created within seven days and during the trial phase in the past one week, 163 registered doctors provided consultation to around 900 patients. The virtual OPD is open from 9 am till 9 pm for COVID-19 patients only who can walk in and avail free consultation from a doctor without scheduling appointments. With MedicSetu having proven its ability to lessen the demand on hospitals, the plan now is to expand the service across 300 cities with over 2000 doctors on board. Doctors who have been verified by the supporting NGOs and have been registered, can connect with the patients one by one and communicate through video conferences. MedicSetu aims to optimise the spare time of doctors for video/teleconsultation for home quarantine patients from privacy and safety of their home. Through this initiative, doctors are contributing voluntarily in association with different groups to help those who are not able to visit, afford or reach out to other establishments. The initiative is driven by the spirit of cooperation and contribution of doctors, NGOs, self-help groups, federations, society, volunteers, and others. The team is further searching for more organisations to join them in this noble effort and assist them in recruiting more doctors to cater to the patients' needs.