Telemedicine App Features

Prior to telemedicine app development, your task is to specify a feature list that depends on the user’s role: patient, doctor, or admin. Nevertheless, every telemedicine app has standard elements that you can see below.

User Profile

This is a vital part of every telehealth solution as it displays the following data: user’s photo, name, gender, age, address, time zone, email, phone number, etc. It should also contain recent calls and an in-app calendar to schedule the next appointments.

Patient Panel

This part typically includes a list of doctors and services they provide along with the information about their education, qualifications, and specialties. There also should be patients’ health histories, advice pages, settings, and patient activity in the app.

Geolocation

This feature is optional but if the app is designed to connect patients and doctors from different regions, it becomes crucial. Geolocation is also important for patients to find pharmacies and clinics nearby and see the approximate time to get to the destination.

Doctor-Patient Communication

Depending on a selected telemedicine app’s type, the communication between patients and physicians may be as follows:

  • text chat

  • audio calls

  • live video calls

The challenge is to make the messenger easy to use and share photos, audio/video files, and other documents as well as to provide a smooth connection during video consultations.

Electronic Health Records (EHR)

It is necessary for telemedicine applications to access EHR to ensure:

  • workflow flexibility

  • data accessibility

  • software convenience

EHR manages all the data related to the patients’ conditions, simplifies the doctors’ paperwork, and prevents duplication of records.

Moreover, EHR handles several security issues: the full information can be viewed by an attending physician while specific medical staff gets access to particular blocks of information.

Remote Patient Monitoring

Some apps are created for those patients who require self-monitoring. These may include maternity tracking solutions, or apps that help manage chronic diseases that require glucose or blood pressure monitoring, or even apps that help patients fight severe conditions like cancer and improve their lives.

Prescriptions

After the doctor recommends a prescription, the app prompts the patient where and when they can buy the medication. There can also be an in-app online pharmacy with a delivery option for those who are unable to pick the medications up from pharmacies themselves.

Payments

The payment methods can be different and vary upon the chosen monetization strategy, but there are some traditional ways to pay for such services:

  • credit card

  • insurance

  • employer coverage

  • coupons

Conclusion

The features mentioned above may be used to build a telemedicine app’s MVP. To create your unique solution, you can add some new functions or remove any of them depending on the problem your app solves. Just remember to ensure proper data gathering, processing, and storage in a safe and secure form. You can read more about telemedicine app development, just visit this article 

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