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LOVE YOUR HEART

4 ways to keep it

beating strong for

Valentine’s Day.

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DIABETES WALK

Join us to raise

awareness of this

common disease.

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healthscene

Nonprofit Org.

U.S. Postage

PAID

Platteville, WI

Permit No. 7

Golden Valley

Memorial Healthcare

1600 N. Second St.

Clinton, MO 64735

N E W S F R O M G O L D E N V A L L E Y M E M O R I A L H E A L T H C A R E

W I N T E R 2 0 1 7

From stethoscopes to CT scans and anesthesia to electronic health records, advances in medical

technology have helped improve the lives of patients everywhere—including those in our

community. At Golden Valley Memorial Healthcare (GVMH), we’re committed to offering

big-city care close to home through the use of technology. Here is an up-close look at three of

our most recent technological advances.

—Continued on page 2

H

IGH-TECH,

H

IGH-QUALITY CARE

Meet our

tech guru

Before he became

a doctor, Bill R.

Dailey, MD, MS,

MSMI, worked

on a nuclear

submarine and

earned a chemical

engineering

degree. “I’m

insatiably curious,” he says.

Here are some other

interesting facts about this

tech-savvy Chief of Medical

Information at GVMH:

He is a board-certified

clinical informaticist and family

physician. He sees patients four

days a week.

He programs computers and

uses digital-quality data to help

doctors and nurses provide

better patient care.

He is exploring the use of

virtual reality technology to help

patients feel more comfortable

during certain procedures.

“It’s a lot less

impersonal than

you might think,”

Dr. Dailey says. “It’s

just like the doctor

is standing right in

front of them.”

OTHER HIGH-

TECH TOOLS

AVAILABLE

AT GVMH

CT scanner

MRI machine

Electronic health records

Digital operating suites

Telehealth robots

Two telemedicine robots now allow patients

at GVMH to be seen by stroke experts and

other medical specialists from miles away

via two-way video exams.

The InTouch Health units can be

wheeled to a patient’s bedside. The

sophisticated set-up includes a camera,

a microphone and even a stethoscope.

During an exam, remote doctors log on to

a computer, tablet or other device, and see

and speak with patients.

“Because the

technology’s so good, you

can zoom in and see nothing

but the patient’s pupils if

necessary,” says Dr. Bill

Dailey, Chief of Medical

Information at GVMH.

How it helps:

In the

emergency department,

the technology is used to

ensure timely treatments for

stroke. GVMH partners with leading stroke

experts from Research Medical Center in

Kansas City. Using the robot, these distant

neurologists examine patients at GVMH

and quickly determine if they’re eligible

for clot-busting treatments that can help

prevent permanent paralysis.

In other instances, the technology has

been used to provide remote psychiatric

consultations or evaluations of hospitalized

patients who have a change in condition

during the night.

In this way, telemedicine allows rural

hospitals like GVMH to provide great

patient care that would otherwise be

financially difficult to sustain, Dr. Dailey

says.

What do patients think of the virtual

visits? “It’s a lot less impersonal than you

might think,” Dr. Dailey says. “It’s just like

the doctor is standing right in front of them.”

Available:

24 hours a day

Purchased:

Both robots arrived at

different times within the past two years.