Last week I was dodging lemons of aggravations, theft, disappointments, and bad news. This week, I’m making some tasty telehealth lemonade. Saved from a stroke by telehealth, I pay it forward by uniting community broadband teams and healthcare stakeholders through telehealth projects that transform healthcare delivery. I would love to have your support in delivering a telehealth strategy guide to help communities deliver quality physical and mental healthcare to unserved and underserved residents. If a lot of people give a few dollars for this intense mission to make a difference, the Go Fund Me campaign created last week will raise funds to give this guide a righteous liftoff: getting graphic support, travel to Denver, and a booth at the Mountain Connect conference (750+ attendees). I’m also leading a telehealth session at the conference. I will follow Mountain Connect with a national media relations effort. I also want to give you some publicity for you and your organization as a thought leader. GFM campaign funders can add their thoughts and opinions on aspects of telehealth. I'll send details and directions via email. My 25-page guide helps communities use telehealth, public health, and broadband (high-speed Internet) infrastructure to deliver medical care, healthcare, and wellness programs to its residents with little or no access to doctors, insurance, and healthcare in general. It also teaches readers how to use telehealth to drive broadband adoption. The guide highlights telehealth’s current and potential impact on 1) low-income urban dwellers, 2) rural communities, 3) Native American, 4) those for whom English is a second language, 5) veterans, 6) seniors, 8) people with disabilities, and 8) the incarcerated. This document is an effective education tactic that teaches broadband and telehealth stakeholders how to transform medical care, healthcare and wellness. Its easy-to-read lessons cover many telehealth technologies and aspects of typical urban and rural communities. Thank you in advance for your support. And don't forget to tell a friend.
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