Transforming Nursing Care in Saudi Arabia through Telehealth

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Mohammad Abbad Alhrbeei, Marwan Ali ALmarwani, Hani sulimanAl-mutairy, Ibrahim Ali Al-Zahrani, Tahani Hassan Al-Harbi, Eissa Hamdan Al-Harbi, Abdulrahman Mohammed Almatrafi, Ismail Abdu M Alkhayri, Huda yahya Ahmed Absi, Khamsah Saed Ojem Alyami

Abstract

Introduction: The Need for Telehealth in Saudi Arabia Analyzing the nation’s state of health, the allocation of the professional workforce, and hospital bed distribution is faced with stagnation and a quandary to achieve standards. Both healthcare providers and policymakers work to provide the best healthcare to citizens. The conception and instability of healthcare systems are problems in many countries, including Saudi Arabia. Juxtaposing national health systems informs a conversation about national laws, standards, objectives, and values. Ultimately, access to such services plays a key role in providing healthcare and the borders upon how we eat, where we work, and how our air and water are regulated, and where national systems succeed or not, glimpsing their capacity to maintain the health of populations and individuals. In search of a more transformative period in our lives, telehealth interventions have the promising capabilities of alleviating demand on scarce healthcare resources; however, there is still little evidence on the short- or long-term benefits of these interventions.

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