TY - JOUR T1 - Telemedicine in the driver’s seat: new role for primary care access in Brazil and Canada JF - Canadian Family Physician JO - Can Fam Physician SP - 104 LP - 111 VL - 66 IS - 2 AU - Payal Agarwal AU - Natasha Kithulegoda AU - Roberto Umpierre AU - John Pawlovich AU - Juliana Nunes Pfeil AU - Otavio Pereira D’Avila AU - Marcelo Goncalves AU - Erno Harzheim AU - David Ponka Y1 - 2020/02/01 UR - http://www.cfp.ca/content/66/2/104.abstract N2 - Objective To contrast how Brazil’s and Canada’s different jurisdictional and judicial realities have led to different types of telemedicine and how further scale and improvement can be achieved.Composition of the committee A subgroup of the Besrour Centre of the College of Family Physicians of Canada and Canadian telemedicine experts developed connections with colleagues in Porto Alegre, Brazil, and collaborated to undertake a between-country comparison of their respective telemedicine programs.Methods Following a literature review, the authors collectively reflected on their experiences in an attempt to explore the past and current state of telemedicine in Canada and Brazil.Report Both Brazil and Canada share expansive geographies, creating substantial barriers to health for rural patients. Telemedicine is an important part of a universal health system. Both countries have achieved telemedicine programs that have scaled up across large regions and are showing important effects on health care costs and outcomes. However, each system is unique in design and implementation and faces unique challenges for further scale and improvement. Addressing regional differences, the normalization of telemedicine, and potential alignment of telemedicine and artificial intelligence technologies for health care are seen as promising approaches to scaling up and improving telemedicine in both countries. ER -