Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

Menu
  • About RWJF
  • Our Work
  • Research & Publications
View All:
  • Grants
  • Topics
  • Blogs

Telemedicine and Telehealth

You are now viewing 1 - 10 of 15 results

Sort results by:
  • Relevance
  • Alphabetical Order
  • Publication Date

Refine Your Results

  • Topic: Telemedicine and telehealth
  • Topic: Medically underserved areas
By Topic
  • Health IT (14)
  • Information technology and tools (13)
  • Web-based e-health (13)
  • Primary care (13)
  • Coordinated care (12)
  • Primary care/generalist physicians (12)
  • Management/administration (12)
  • Healthy communities (11)
  • Prescription drugs and services (11)
  • Access and barriers to care (9)
  • Chronic disease management (9)
  • Quality of care (9)
  • Underserved populations (8)
  • Community-based care (7)
  • Physicians (7)
By Content
  • Content Type
    • Journal Article (5)
    • Story (4)
    • News Release (2)
    • Program Result Report (2)
    • Commentary (1)
    • Toolkit (1)
    • Video (1)
  • Program Area
    • Pioneer (12)
    • Coverage (2)
    • Quality/Equality (2)
    • Vulnerable Populations (2)
By Demographics
  • Age
    • Children (0-5 years) (1)
    • Children (6-10 years) (1)
    • Adolescents (11-18 years) (1)
  • Race/Ethnicity
    • Black (incl. African American) (1)
    • Latino or Hispanic (1)
  • Location
    • Rural (8)
    • Urban (7)
    • Local or community-based (1)
    • National (1)
  • States and Territories
    • New Mexico (NM) M (11)
    • Missouri (MO) WNC (1)
    • Texas (TX) WSC (1)
    • Washington (WA) P (1)

Beam Me Up

August 1, 2000 | Program Result Report

The Friends of the National Library of Medicine sponsored a workshop focusing on the wide-scale application of telecommunications technologies to improve health and access to care for underserved populations.

WEBCAST: Project ECHO and Veterans Affairs Launch Initiative to Expand Specialty Care to Veterans

July 5, 2012 | Story

Watch live Wednesday, July 11, 2012, at 10 a.m. ET.

Outcomes of Treatment for Hepatitis C Virus Infection by Primary Care Providers

June 1, 2011 | Journal Article

Project ECHO (Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes), a disruptive model of health education and delivery, makes the medical resources of academic medical centers available to treat and improve outcomes for rural HCV patients.

Partnering Urban Academic Medical Centers and Rural Primary Care Clinicians to Provide Complex Chronic Disease Care

May 19, 2011 | Journal Article

Project ECHO enables specialists to partner with primary care clinicians in underserved areas to deliver complex specialty care to patients.

Project ECHO

June 14, 2011 | Story

This disruptive model of health care education and delivery enables primary care doctors in underserved areas to provide top-quality care for complex conditions locally.

NEJM Study: Primary Care Clinicians Can Treat Hepatitis C as Effectively as Specialists Through New Delivery Model

June 1, 2011 | News Release

University of New Mexico's Project ECHO poised to spread best practices, eliminate barriers to treatment and improve health care quality across the United States.

Virtual Knowledge Network Enables Primary Care Providers to Offer Best Practice Care for Complex Diseases

May 16, 2011 | Story

Sanjeev Arora, MD, started Project ECHO (Extension for Community Healthcare Outcomes) in 2004 to leverage scarce specialist resources and expand access to treatment for patients with hepatitis C throughout New Mexico.

Expanding Access to Hepatitis C Virus Treatment

June 11, 2010 | Journal Article

Specialized treatment for chronic conditions is often available only at large academic medical centers. Project ECHO is training primary care physicians in rural areas of New Mexico to deliver best practice care for many diseases.

Project ECHO

February 15, 2011 | Story/Video

A Force Multiplier: Spreading Medical Knowledge, Expanding Health Care Capacity

M.D. Anderson IVR (Interactive Voice Response) System Training

January 1, 2011 | Toolkit

This resource contains instructions for the Interactive Voice Response (IVR) system and how it is used for the purpose of symptom assessment and management. It is a multiple software/hardware system that consists mainly in a telephone calling system ...

  • 1
  • 2
  • Next
RWJF Home → Topics → Telemedicine and Telehealth
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Email
  • RSS

Our mission: to improve the health and health care of all Americans.

  • About RWJF
    • Our Mission
    • Program Areas
    • From Our President
    • Leadership & Staff
    • Annual Reports
    • Newsroom
    • Job Opportunities
    • Office Location
    • Our Policies
  • Our Work
    • Health Policy
    • Prevention
    • Cost and Value
    • Leadership
    • All Topics
  • Program Areas
    • Childhood Obesity
    • Coverage
    • Human Capital
    • Pioneer
    • Public Health
    • Quality/Equality
    • Vulnerable Populations
  • Research & Publications
    • Find RWJF Research
    • Assessing Our Impact
    • How We Work
    • Data Center
    • RWJF DataHub
  • Grants
    • What We Fund
    • Calls for Proposals
    • Grantee Resources
    • FAQs
  • Blogs
    • Human Capital
    • New Public Health
    • Pioneering Ideas
  • My RWJF
    • Subscription Management
    • My Profile
  • Contact RWJF
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

© 2001–2013 Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. All Rights Reserved.