Facilitate the international dissemination of knowledge and experience in Telemedicine and eHealth and providing access to recognized experts in the field worldwide
Promotion & Support of Telemedicine/eHealth activities worldwide
Primarily an umb
ine/eHealth activities worldwide
Primarily an umbrella for national Telemedicine and eHealth organizations
Assisting the start-up of new national organizations
Non governmental and non for profit society with close ties to WHO and ITU
Supporting developing countries in the field of Telemedicine and e-Health
Neutral & Democratic (established under Swiss law)
Fair membership fees
Networking within the international Telemedicine/eHealth community
Exploring and highlighting the existing synergies between the global players
Set-up support of new national members
Dissemination of information via the ISfTeH website and newsletters
Participation in the yearly issue of a Telemedicine Directory
Access to telemedical networks
Download of relevant documents
Participation in working groups on Telemedical standards and regulations
Assistance on legal matters
Organizing and supporting a yearly ISfTeH scientific conference in different continents
Open dialogue and cooperation with the industry to favorize the development and implementation of innovative and practical products & services
Promotion of the ISfTeH activities via specialized MediaSupporting the existing National Members and their activities
The seed of the International Society for Telemedicine was planted at the First International Conference on the Medical Aspects of Telemedicine, held in Tromsø, Norway in 1993. A group of experts at the meeting met to discuss the possibility of forming an international society. The field was as yet in its infancy, and, owing to the varied interests and contrasting ideas of the participants, agreement on a course of action could not be reached and the proposal was unsuccessful.
A second attempt was made at the Second Conference, held at the Mayo Clinic in 1995 in conjunction with the 2nd Mayo Telemedicine Symposium. Similar problems arose, and the proposal was again unsuccessful.
Third time lucky. The Third International Conference on the Medical Aspects of Telemedicine was held in Kobe, Japan in May 1997. In the leadup to the meeting, the Secretary, Guy Harris, embarked on an aggressive plan to found a society. Luminaries from around the world were recruited to join a Founder’s Committee, many of whom were able to attend the conference. The Committee also included the members of the conference’s Japanese organizing committee.
The members of the Founders’ Committee were:
Drs DeBakey, Goldberg, Koop, Nicogossian and Satava, (USA), Castellano (Mexico), Medvedev (Russia), Hjelm (HK), Rossing (Denmark), Alexander and Yellowlees (Australia), Michaelis (Israel), Kvist (Finland), Lareng (France), Lun (Singapore), Meme (Kenya), Filler, Elford, Picot and Lacroix (Canada), Bracale (Italy), Padeken (Germany), Ashihara, Barron, Fujino, Fukuda, Harris, Inamoto, Inamura, Kiyotani, Koike, Maeda, Matsuoka, Mizushima, Nakajima, Ohtsuki, Shimosato, Tanaka, Tsuda, Ueda, Yamauchi (Japan) and International Advisory Board (Allen, Brugal, Ferguson, Gitlin, Lemke, McGee, Preston and Wold) of the 3rd International Conference on the Medical Aspects of Telemedicine.
The meetings were held over two days. Discussion was spirited as each of the thirty participants sought to establish their view on what all sensed was an groundbreaking occasion. About halfway through the first meeting it seemed history would repeat itself, with the predominance of a particular view that sought to see the new group founded along political lines. A deadlock ensued, Finally, as the meeting approached its scheduled conclusion, relief came in the form of a particularly impassioned speech, so cleverly crafted and forcefully delivered that none dared contradict it. The meeting chairman, a canny veteran of a dozen similar battles, seized the moment and forced the vote. The motion was carried - the International Society for Telemedicine was formed along the lines its original promoters had sought. Officers were empanelled and the future was mapped out.
Subsequent activity focussed on development of the biannual conferences, The host country for the first conference of the new society was Jerusalem, Israel, as the Fourth International Conference on the Medical Aspects of Telemedicine. At that meeting the decision was made to hold the conferences on annual basis. The Fifth Conference was held in 2000 in Montreal, Canada, the Sixth in 2001 in Uppsala, Sweden, the Seventh in Regensburg, Germany. The Eighth Conference, in 2003, fittingly returned on the 10th anniversary of the First to the place of its founding, to Tromsø, Norway. The meetings were all very well attended and admirably served the purpose of the International Society for Telemedicine in furthering the knowledge about telemedicine.
In the run-up to the Regensburg meeting, the decision was made that the International Society for Telemedicine needed to be reformulated. Although the meetings had been greatly successful, the society had found it difficult to fulfill its other goals, and so a new way forward was sought. After discussion at Regensburg, it was decided to reestablish the Society more along the lines of a federation of national bodies. The decision was endorsed and in September 15th, 2003 ‘ISfT 2’ was officially established as Not-for-profit organization under the Swiss law.
All those involved in ‘ISfT 1’ are immensely proud of their efforts in keeping the Society operational, under sometimes difficult conditions. Newly invigorated and with new purpose, the new International Society for Telemedicine looks set to fulfill all of the Society’s original goals, and many more.
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