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HONOLULU (AP) - "The doctor will see you now" has new meaning.

Doctors in Hawaii will start making online house calls Thursday in the nation's first large-scale program of its kind that some believe could be a groundbreaking step in health care.

The service is being provided by Hawaii Medical Service Association under a licensing agreement with Boston-based American Well. It is available for a fee to all Hawaii residents, including the uninsured and non-HMSA members.

"This is changing the face of how medicine is delivered in a very positive, safe and efficient way," said Dr. Patricia Avila, medical director of HMSA's Online Care.

Avila said the program isn't intended to reinvent the house call. "It's a redesign."

Computers equipped with a Web camera are used to set up a live, face-to-face consultations where patients describe their symptoms and even show anything from a rash to a wound. They could get questions answered, get advice or prescriptions for anything but controlled substances.

Dr. Roy Schoenberg, American Well's chief executive, calls the launch the "world premiere" of his technology that has been in the works for two years and is being offered around the clock, seven days a week. The service will soon be offered in several other states by other health plans, and will become "very prevalent in 2009," he said.

Dr. Dale Vincent, director of telemedicine at the University of Hawaii medical school, said there have been similar pilot projects, but nothing close to the scale of the HMSA system.

"It is a glimpse of the future," he said. "This program is going to be computer to computer, but in the very near future it's going to be mobile phone to mobile phone."