Commentary

Pandemic increases need for home-based care with remote monitoring of patients


 

Possible limitations

This model of care has some limitations, including that it is not geared toward high volumes in my opinion and will not work in every home. Patients need to have Internet capabilities, phone services, and other features in their homes that make it possible for them to access this type of care. Additionally, patients may not be able to get their insurance companies to pay for these services. While the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services recently authorized patients to be transferred from EDs or inpatient wards to hospital-level care at home, for how long will reimbursements for this kind of care continue? If insurance will not pay for this monitoring at home, then will physician practices and hospital based practices provide this non reimbursed service?

Also, patients and their families may not be accepting of this model of care because they may feel it is inferior to inpatient hospitalization.

Despite these limitations, as long as Medicare and other health insurance programs provide reimbursement for such hospital-at-home services, I foresee this concept being highly used and benefiting health care entities in the United States.

Dr. Deep is a general internist in a multispecialty group practice with Aspirus Antigo (Wis.) Clinic and the chief medical officer and a staff physician at Aspirus Langlade Hospital in Antigo. He is also assistant clinical professor at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Central Wisconsin Campus, and the governor of the Wisconsin chapter of the American College of Physicians. Dr. Deep serves on the editorial advisory board of Internal Medicine News. Contact him at imnews@mdedge.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Antidepressant shows early promise for mild COVID-19
MDedge Emergency Medicine
AMA takes on vaccine misinformation, physician vaccines, racism
MDedge Emergency Medicine
COVID-19 cases in children continue to set records
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Blood glucose on admission predicts COVID-19 severity in all
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Moderna filing for FDA emergency COVID-19 vaccine approval, reports 94.1% efficacy
MDedge Emergency Medicine
What the Biden-Harris COVID-19 Advisory Board is missing
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Patient health suffers amid pandemic health care shortages
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Are more female physicians leaving medicine as pandemic surges?
MDedge Emergency Medicine
ACIP: Health workers, long-term care residents first tier for COVID-19 vaccine
MDedge Emergency Medicine
U.S. passes 1.3 million COVID-19 cases in children
MDedge Emergency Medicine