How Telemonitoring Technology is Improving Quality, Saving Lives and Conserving Dollars
Telemonitoring offers security
and peace of mind to the families of those receiving health care in their
homes. It compliments and enhances the face-to-face care that home health nurses
continue to provide. Telemonitoring offers an early warning system that helps
physicians and home health care providers intervene before symptom warnings
become crises, make changes to the patient’s care plan, and prevent re-hospitalization.
And it’s conserving dollars that allow our state’s home health care agencies to
serve more patients.
Recently,
VNA Healthcare, UCONN School of Nursing and the UCONN Center on Aging completed
a study published in Home Health Care Management & Practice that tracked
outcomes of heart failure patients who were monitored via telehealth in their
homes. The research team found that telemonitoring and self-care education
significantly reduced these patients' hospital readmission rates by 50 percent
compared to a control group. The patients also reported improved quality of
life and a greater ability to manage their health.
Telemonitoring by Connecticut’s home health care agencies are enabling
the state to serve more of aging residents in their homes. According Beka Apostolidis, cardiac care
supervisor for VNA Healthcare, in 2013, telehealth services provided to VNA Healthcare patients saved the
organization 690 home visits, which translates into approximately $70,000 in
Medicare and Medicaid dollars that can be utilized to treat additional
patients.
Telemonitoring recently saved the life of one of VNA Healthcare’s
clients. Home health nurses, used to speaking with the homebound patient
suffering from hypertension, had come to know her normal ‘baseline’ voice. One
morning, the patient’s nurse checked the patient’s telemonitor and noticed that
her blood pressure had dropped dramatically. The nurse also noted that the
patient sounded weak, speaking in a soft voice.
A care supervisor called the patient’s daughter, who went to her
mother’s home to assess the situation. Meanwhile, the nurse called the
patient’s doctor, who advised the home health care team to temporarily halt the
patient’s blood pressure medications. After the patient’s daughter reported
that her mother was having bouts of diarrhea and was experiencing confusion,
the patient was taken to the emergency department, where she was re–hydrated
and released.
Over the next few days, the agency’s visiting and telemonitor nurses kept
tabs on the patient through in-person visits and telemonitor checks. In
consultation with her physician, they adapted dosing of her blood pressure
medications, which helped normalize the patient’s blood pressure, preventing additional
emergency care visits and hospitalizations.
In-home visits, seven days-per-week
telemonitoring, physician consultations and family involvement enhanced the
healthcare this patient was able to receive at home. In addition, continuous
monitoring of her vital signs helped the patient improve and better manage her daily
health routine.