How Remote Patient Monitoring Can Reduce Healthcare Costs

Skyrocketing costs, longer hospital stays, readmissions, and less-than-favorable outcomes—these factors make improving the bottom line a continual challenge for healthcare providers. But one of the major benefits of remote patient monitoring (RPM) is its ability to reduce costs.

What’s more, if the U.S. Centers of Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) gets its way, a new proposed rule that allows home healthcare providers to count RPM as a reimbursable cost will take effect as of January 1, 2019. This is in addition to the reimbursement that Medicare offers already.

Today, thanks to RPM technology, healthcare organizations can spend less time worrying about expenditures and more time focused on providing outstanding patient care. The cost savings of RPM can be significant for patients, as well.

RPM Eliminates Unnecessary Visits

When it comes to reducing healthcare costs, RPM steps in by monitoring patients around the clock and sending info to healthcare professionals in real-time. As a result, the need for in-person visits is shifting.

Using RPM, in-home care providers collect vital healthcare data, such as blood pressure readings, heart rate, breathing, glucose levels, weight, and more. This eliminates the need for routine, in-person visits that are just about collecting health data.

For example, RPM in one hospital network reduced postpartum hypertension visits by 57%, while also improving patient engagement. Those were not in-home visits, but the fact remains: easier access to patient data reduces the need for patient visits, which reduces healthcare costs.

RPM Optimizes Time Spent with Patients

With RPM technology, medical professionals need not spend valuable time on the intake of  routine vitals and questions (e.g., how the patient is sleeping), because this data is available to the provider before the visit. This means in-person time can be spent answering questions and otherwise making the most of the health visit.

In addition, when healthcare professionals are less inundated with routine tasks, they’re less likely to experience burnout. Stressed medical care providers are less efficient, they may quit or be fired, and it’s expensive to hire, train, and onboard new employees.

RPM Improves Communication

RPM enables efficient communication between medical professionals and their patients to manage care for a variety of injuries, illnesses, and chronic conditions. By overcoming the obstacle to in-person visits that geographical distance poses, RPM technology allows more frequent contact and a stronger relationship between the patient and provider. Tools such as video conferencing, mobile apps, and data monitoring allow practitioners to treat patients more efficiently and effectively. This results in catching health problems at earlier stages and a decrease in readmissions, which helps reduce healthcare costs.

Providers can also use this technology to send patients reminders to take medications or attend upcoming visits. These reminders facilitate better outcomes, prevent the wasted time and expense that occurs with missed appointments, and reduce costs because health conditions are more likely to be caught in the earlier stages.

RPM Reduces Healthcare Costs for Patients, Too

Of course, these cost savings are passed on to the patient, as well. Not having to pay for unnecessary visits, optimizing the time spent with healthcare providers when they do visit, and improved outcomes means less medical care down the road.

Just as importantly, RPM technology increases patient engagement. Engaged patients are more likely to follow healthcare provider recommendations and be compliant with treatment regimens. This makes healthcare efforts more efficient and reduces the likelihood of additional treatments. Engaged patients with chronic conditions are also easier to monitor regularly, which enables more consistent care and fewer emergencies.

Reducing Health Care Costs Is a Win-Win

Given the increasing demand for an improved healthcare experience, it behooves providers to consider RPM as a way to find opportunities to improve their ROI while enhancing the quality of patient care. Healthcare providers are turning to RPM to improve their bottom lines.

For chronic illness management, hospital readmission prevention monitoring, caring for elderly or homebound patients, and monitoring high-risk patients, RPM optimizes communication with healthcare providers. RPM also allows patients to enjoy the convenience of in-home care, and eliminates the need for unnecessary office visits.