HALIFAX - A new mobile phone application in Nova Scotia is aimed at giving people easier access to health services and information, Premier Tim Houston announced Wednesday.
Developed at a cost of $10 million, YourHealthNS is touted as a 鈥渙ne-stop shop鈥 to book services, get information and find available health care faster.
Houston said providing information for patients is vital as the province attempts to bolster a health system that is constantly evolving with new ways to provide care.
鈥淲e understand that we need to be innovative and we need to embrace technology to make sure people can access the care that they need,鈥 the premier told reporters. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all about making sure people understand their options.鈥
The app, which is now available, comes with a home screen that can be personalized. Users will be able to book blood tests and X-rays 鈥 as long as they have a referral from a doctor 鈥 as well as flu shots and COVID-19 vaccine appointments. Patients can also use the app to learn expected emergency room wait times, to access vaccination records, and to receive same-day virtual care.
With the app, all Nova Scotians will be able to get two virtual health sessions a year covered by the province, regardless of whether they have a family doctor, Houston said.
鈥淚f they (people) are having trouble getting into their primary care provider they can go to virtual care up to twice a year,鈥 he said.
Officials said the additional virtual coverage through private provider Maple would cost the province $18 million.
Tara Sampali, senior director of global health systems planning for Nova Scotia health, said the free offer shouldn鈥檛 strain the capacity of virtual care. She said it has not always been clear to patients about what pharmacies and walk-in clinics are available for consults, and the app will help direct people to the specific services they need.
鈥淚t is giving pathways, so it鈥檚 not always about virtual care,鈥 Sampali said.
鈥淪o overall we feel it鈥檚 all these services coming together (in the app) that provide the capacity,鈥 said Sampali.
Scott McKenna, chief information officer at Nova Scotia Health and IWK Health, said the app is tied to civic addresses and can help people find the closest health-care provider. For example, if someone is travelling and needs a pharmacy, they can enter their location in the app and immediately learn where the closest one is.
McKenna said the app also has a favourites button that gives people quicker access to information they use most frequently. As well, there is a feedback button that will collect users' ideas for features and services that can be added, he said.
Officials said the app's functionality is the result of extensive research aimed at making it user-friendly.
鈥淭he way the app appears, the buttons, the colours and the font size, that鈥檚 all been informed, including the way people want to navigate,鈥 Sampali said.
This report by 春色直播was first published Nov. 1, 2023.