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.com
Volume 5, Issue 4 (Suppl)
Occup Med Health Aff
ISSN: 2329-6879 OMHA, an open access journal
Health Congress 2017
October 16-17, 2017
October 16-17, 2017 Dubai, UAE
12
th
World Congress on
Industrial Health, Healthcare and Medical Tourism
Medical attention for tourist and local people at Villa de Leyva Boyaca, Colombia
Lilia E Aparicio, Patrick F Tarquino and Paulo C Coronado
Universidad Distrital Francisco José de Caldas, Colombia
C
obbled streets and the white facades in Villa de Leyva receive travelers arriving at this Boyacense municipality which
is part of the heritage towns-network of Colombia, where you can arrive from Bogotá the Capital City of Colombia, in
a land trip by three hours. Founded in June 12, 1572 and recognized by its colonial architecture and as a high international
tourist attraction, which offers hospitality and landscapes, but it lacks protocol for medical attention for tourist, service which
is covered by insurance policies but it does not include an immediate attention and a faster protocol to resolve issue. For
this reason, we propose a specialist telemedicine consultation that satisfies the expectations and needs of tourists under any
eventuality, using teleconsultation as an alternative of innovation in medicine. According to the Colombian Health Tourism
Association (2014), the most requested treatments and procedures are esthetic and wellness medicine, because of the low costs
compared with other countries and the quality of services. In terms of wellness medicine (inspired wellness), Colombia has
an important advantage in ecosystems which serve as welfare for tourists, this advantage in association with procedures and
treatments of alternative medicine (drugs without chemicals), provides a growth opportunity in the coming years. For the
above reasons, it has been selected as first teleconsultation service as the alternative medicine and consequently the offer of
another type of teleconsultation as esthetic medicine or emergency teleconsultation as telecardiology or teleginecology.
References
1.Olson C A, Thomas J F (2017) Telehealth: No Longer an Idea for the Future.
Adv Pediatr;
64(1): 347-370.
2.Sharma R, Fleischut P, Barchi D (2017) Telemedicine and its transformation of emergency care: a case study of one of the largest US integrated healthcare delivery systems.
Int J
Emerg Med
; 10(1): 21.
3.Harris M S, Dodson E E (2017) Hearing health access in developing countries.
Curr Opin Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg;
25(5): 353-358.
4.Woldaregay A Z, Walderhaug S, Hartvigsen G (2017) Telemedicine Services for the Arctic: A Systematic Review.
JMIR Med Inform;
285(2): e16.
5.Clavagnier I (2017) [Telemedicine, remote collaboration].
REV INFIRM;
66(232): 24-26.
Biography
Lilia E Aparicio is a Telemedicine and Tele-informatics Teacher at Universidad Distrital Bogota, Colombia. She has built a telemedicine model after years of
experience in research with referenced groups and estate offices evaluating, teaching and administrate different projects coaching groups at several Colombian
institutions.
leap0763@gmail.comLilia E Aparicio et al., Occup Med Health Aff 2017, 5:4 (Suppl)
DOI: 10.4172/2329-6879-C1-037