COVID-19 named by WHO for Novel coronavirus NCP concept. Doctor or lab technician holding blood sample with novel (new) coronavirus N.C.P. in Wuhan, Hubei Province, China, medical and healthcare
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Waiting 72 hours to receive COVID-19 test results can feel like forever. To speed up that process for urgent, priority patients, eHealth NSW has partnered with Microsoft to use cloud technology and artificial intelligence to reduce the waiting period to three hours.

NSW Health Pathology, which has been charged with overseeing COVID-19[1] testing clinics, has deployed rapid testing for COVID-19 to 35 portable point-of-care devices, so patients can be tested anywhere before their data is uploaded to Azure cloud via 4G connectivity and is reviewed by a clinician -- no matter their location -- in near real-time.

"I think with remote monitoring and remote testing you can start to change service models so you can have self-service in communities. That's how you're improving the quality of care, not just the availability of care," NSW Health Pathology CIO James Patterson said.

The point-of-care devices have also been used in specific COVID-19 testing situations, such as allowing test data to be collected from crew and passengers on a ship, so that results are instantly uploaded and analysed.

At the same, Patterson revealed the same technology was used to underpin the service that has enabled NSW Health Pathology to send NSW residents a SMS[2] if their COVID-19 test results came back negative.

See also: COVID-19 has become a powerful catalyst for rapid cloud migration[3] (TechRepublic)

Patterson added by being able to ingest data from different sources -- the point-of-care-devices, electronic medical records, such as My Health Records, and data stores in the NSW Health's systems -- analysis and reporting can be completed on a single platform.

"The whole volume of our COVID-19 tests is now visible through that secure Power BI platform, covering around

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