On a national level, Dr. Alverson is on the Boards of ATA and the Center for Telehealth and e-Health Law (CTeL) both of which are based in Washington DC, and are involved in policies, regulations and legislation that affect telehealth on a broad level. He was elected Vice President of ATA in 2008 and will become President in 2010. He is also the ATA representative on the Joint Commission Ambulatory Health Care Professional and Technology Advisory Committee. He is a founder and prior chairman of the Four Corners Telehealth Consortium, addressing regional interstate coordination between Arizona, Colorado, Utah, and New Mexico. He has also been involved in international telehealth projects, particularly in Latin America. One initiative includes the use of river boats in the Amazon region that act as mobile floating clinics with the development of uplink-downlink telemedicine capability in the depths of the Jungle. These endeavors include collaboration with the Iberoamerican Science, Technology and Education Consortium (ISTEC), which includes over 100 universities in Latin America and Spain, and the American Telemedicine Association Latin American Caribbean Chapter (ATALACC). Other potential international initiatives include development of telehealth programs in Nepal, India, Iraq, and Africa. Dr. Alverson has been an investigator on a number of telehealth research programs, including "Project TOUCH (Telehealth Outreach for Unified Community Health)," a joint collaborative effort with the University of Hawaii, the University of New Mexico and the Maui and UNM High Performance Computing Centers, incorporating virtual reality simulation and virtual collaboration over the Next Generation Internet Access Grid that can support "just-in-time" team training or "serious games" in which people can participate together in a virtual world even if they're hundreds of miles apart. He has worked with the Uniform Services University National Capital Area Medical Simulation Center in this effort, and in conjunction with the Telemedicine and Advanced Technology Research Center (TATRC) at the US Army Medical Research and Material Command (USAMRMC), Ft. Detrick, MD. He is on the Board of Advanced Initiatives in Medical Simulation (AIMS) to promote the integration of simulation in healthcare for education, training, and performance assessment. |
![]()
|


