Thursday, October 15, 2009

Ontario company attracts "dozens of countries" to its retail telepharmacy machine

Charlene Close of 680 News out of Toronto did an informative write up on Patient Care Automation Services, Inc from Oakville, ON:
Patient Care Automation Services Inc. (PCAS) is the developer of the PharmaTrust® MedCentre which is designed for use in hospitals, pharmacies, medical clinics and workplaces. About a dozen countries are already interested in the product.
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It operates much like an automated bank machine - insert your paper prescription into the machine or pick up a phone, it then connects electronically via video to an actual pharmacist who can answer any questions the patient has and then sign off on the prescription before the drugs are dispensed.

The company received a $1.5-million grant from the National Research Council of Canada today that will assist in further development and marketing it across Canada, the U.S. and the UK.

This is the company the Canadian government expressed an interest in within a press release from October 13th, and was previously covered here at the Telepharmacy blog.

UPDATE 1: October 28, more press on the Telepharmacy machine: Fierce Healthcare ran this article, complete with announcements from Canadian government officials from the National Research Council and the Minister of State for Science and Technology's office about funding the project. The article also has new info about the system's use:
Currently, trials are taking place at Sunnybrook Hospital in Toronto, under the supervision of the hospital's pharmacy; there are production sites at the Albany Clinic, in Toronto, and Cambridge Memorial Hospital, in Cambridge, Ont.

The system is under evaluation as a pandemic response platform by researchers at the University Health Network and the company has also just recently received approval to deploy its system in select locations in the UK.

UPDATE 2: Nov, here is the National Research Council's official statement.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Interesting that it couldn't attract private investment but rather had to depend on a government grant. Don't know if that is because the potential return is inadequate or the development or market risks are too high ... or if this is a feature of the Canadian health system.

What drivers or barriers am I missing here?

John O. said...

Maybe they just applied for an available grant and took what they could get for "free"?

John O. said...

Check the article linked in the UPDATE at the end of the blog post -- a bit more info about the Canadian government's role.