Mayo Clinic Finds Success With Remote Patient Monitoring

Mayo Clinic recently published a new study of its remote patient monitoring (RPM) program for ambulatory care of COVID-19 patients (n = 7,074), aimed at reducing acute care utilization and hospital admissions.

The program included two care-delivery models based on patient risk, enabling RPM-registered nurses to respond to technology-generated alerts and deliver standardized care for clinical assessments and patient management.

Low-Intensity Care Model (n = 2,314)

  • Patient had no risk factors for severe illness and low symptom burden
  • Mayo provided thermometer and pulse oximeter
  • Patient reported symptoms twice daily
  • 1:50 nurse to patient ratio

High-Intensity Care Model (n = 4,760)

  • Patient had 1+ risk factors for severe illness and moderate-to-high symptom burden
  • Mayo provided LTE-enabled tablet, thermometer, pulse oximeter, blood pressure monitor
  • Patient reported symptoms twice daily
  • 1:30 nurse to patient ratio

Results

Among all patients, ED visit and hospitalization rates within 30 days of enrollment were 11.4% (low-intensity) and 9.4% (high intensity), with a 30 day mortality rate of 0.4%. The RPM engagement rate was above-average at 78.9%, supporting recent changes to the CMS physician fee schedule to expand reimbursement for RPM services to patients with acute conditions.

The Takeaway

The study suggests that RPM for management of COVID-19 is associated with “excellent clinical outcomes,” especially among patients at risk for severe illness. 

Given that Mayo Clinic’s RPM program was part of a retrospective cohort study, it remains unknown how the results compare with “usual care,” but a matched case-control study is planned to evaluate the program.

Less Hospitals, More Homes

Current Health, who raised a $43m Series B in April to expand it’s remote care management platform, has now done just that. 

Newly announced partnerships with Workpath (a Ro company) and ScriptDrop enable Current Health’s service to begin offering both in-home blood draws as well as medication delivery.

  • Workpath – Current Health’s clinical dashboard now allows physicians to determine what blood tests are needed for remote patients before using Workpath’s integrated tool to dispatch a certified phlebotomist. 
  • ScriptDrop – Physicians can now access ScriptDrop’s on-demand and same-day prescription delivery tool within Current Health’s platform, a feature that could improve patient adherence to needed medications.
  • Benefits – The fully-integrated remote care platform greatly simplifies physician workflows when ordering in-home tests or medications, with the added benefit of further reducing the need for patients to visit a lab or pharmacy.

The Takeaway

Current Health’s latest partnerships are centered around improving access for patients and finding efficiencies for physicians. The company is aiming to build a world where doctors can develop a diagnosis and provide a treatment without ever having a face-to-face interaction with a patient, and this latest expansion gets them at least two steps closer to reaching that goal.

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