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Satellite-Based satHealth™ Networks Battle COVID-19

July 20, 2020

Nicole Robinson

Authored by Nicole Robinson, Senior Vice President, Global Government, SES Networks

One of the key advantages of satellite is its incredible reach and ability to deliver connectivity everywhere – even in the most remote and geographically-isolated locations. SES and its partners have leveraged SES’s global satellite fleet to provide connectivity services to hospitals across the globe in Bangladesh, Sierra Leone, Mexico and Italy.

Medical professionals have been in the limelight for the last several months as they put their lives at risk to help care for the sick during the COVID-19 pandemic. The least that companies and governments can do is to provide them with the right tools. At SES we were in a position to help through leveraging our existing partnerships and resources in support of remote hospitals.

For years, the Luxembourg Government’s SATMED platform has helped various non-governmental organisations (NGOs), making a difference for healthcare professionals by giving them access to a dedicated e-Health software via SES’s satellite capacity. This existing solution has become increasingly important and necessary during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. SES_Friendship_NGO_image Picture credit: Friendship NGO

Friendship NGO continues to serve two floating hospitals off the remote islands of northern Bangladesh and a hospital on-land in the south of the country. Patient data is sent from the Friendship Central server to the National Healthcare Database via satellite.

Photo is courtesy of Friendship NGO.

The same connectivity also helps reinforce the triage system, which quickly identifies and refers patients to the dedicated governmental COVID-19 centres. Since the start of the COVID-19 outbreak in the country, the hospitals have served more than 10,000 patients. Overall, since the implementation of SATMED, it supported Friendship in delivery of more than 18.5 million healthcare services across the country’s remote communities.

SATMED has also been used by the Serabu Hospital in Sierra Leone, that is supported by the German Doctors NGO. The hospital is located in a remote region approximately eight hours away from the nation’s capital of Freetown, and two hours away from the nearest administrative centre. The Serabu Hospital is the only location in the area that has electricity, and is responsible for providing care to thousands of patients. SATMED is the only connection that Serabu Hospital has to the outside world.

Photo is courtesy of German Doctors NGO.

Drawing from its experience fighting Ebola in 2014, the hospital expanded the existing triage system and set up information exchange with the dedicated government COVID-19 centres. SATMED allows real-time situational assessment and data exchange with other hospitals both in the country and abroad. It also supports provision of various critical services to the population, enables X-ray data to be processed with the help of doctors located in Germany, and empowers the management of critical supplies and logistics.

Supporting the Government of Mexico’s telemedicine network

In the face of the spreading coronavirus pandemic and with time of the essence, the Government of Mexico sought SES’s help to support deployment of its telemedicine network. Local teams, working hand-in-hand with SES, managed to launch the service in a few weeks, enabling the delivery of communications service to 35 public hospitals across Mexico via satellite. SES and local operator TELECOMM are extremely proud that they were able to rollout service so quickly and provide support for telemedicine connectivity and the delivery of vital healthcare services.

Scaling COVID-19 testing in Italy

In Europe, the Piedmont regional government in Italy and its healthcare professionals needed the European Space Agency’s satellite-enabled mobile B-LiFE laboratory to scale COVID-19 screening operations. The mobile laboratory, which is currently deployed to one of the worst-hit by COVID-19 regions, allows testing of frontline healthcare staff, civil protection volunteers and police forces. To enable the mission, SES and GovSat, supported by the Luxembourg Department of Defence, have put in place an end-to-end satellite connectivity solution for real-time data transmission, exchange of epidemiology cartographies and communication with remote experts.

Connectivity is an important tool in the fight against COVID-19 thanks to its ability to deliver telemedicine services and e-Health applications. Satellite is playing a vital role in supporting medical professionals in their daily duties, enabling telehealth via teleconferencing, managing information and empowering the exchange of patient and clinical data. At SES, we are humbled and proud to support this effort and will continue to go the extra mile to make sure we can make a difference.

Filed Under: Comms

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