by Rick Garrick
The Keewaytinook Okimakanak Research Institute (KORI) is looking at potential business models for First Nation community networks.“We’re looking to develop business models the communities are using as Application Service Providers (ASP) to provide broadband services delivered over K-Net,” says Franz Seibel, a researcher at KORI.
By Rick Garrick
By Rick Garrick
North Caribou Lake’s Martine Kanakakeesic still remembers how surprised the Elders in her community were during their first Telehealth examinations.
KO Telemedicine is working with Lakehead University to develop an Aboriginal University Entry Program for Health Careers.“We always wanted to work together with Lakehead University to deliver education through videoconferencing,” says Gibbet Stevens, KO Telemedicine’s education coordinator, noting that Lakehead University is already offering a pilot program for the 2007/08 school year that delivers two of the Native Nursing Entry Program’s six-and-a-half courses, Communication and Study Skills, by videoconference.
George Kenny saved by Telemedicine Rick Garrick “Telehealth saved my leg.”
George Kenny clearly remembers the day in 2003 when his leg was saved by a specialist in Winnipeg after a Telemedicine examination showed that his swollen leg was due to an infection that spread from a baker’s cyst behind his calf.