Research
uncovers the benefits of remote monitoring
Newswise — Researchers
from Canada and Australia have found that
the use of remote monitoring for patients
with chronic heart failure has the potential
to significantly improve clinical outcomes
(mortality, morbidity and quality
indicators).
The use of remote
monitoring (telephone support or
telemonitoring) to electronically transfer a
patients' physiological data such as blood
pressure, weight and ECG and oxygen details,
to their healthcare provider has increased
in prevalence over the past years.
According to research
recently published in The British Medical
Journal, remote monitoring for patients
with chronic heart failure helped reduce
heart failure admissions to hospitals and
lowered all cause mortality by nearly twenty
per cent.
“What we found is that
the use of remote monitoring programs can
improve outcomes in patients with heart
failure and such an approach could help deal
with the increasing number of patients with
chronic heart failure that cannot be
accommodated in existing specialty clinics
due to access issues related to geography,
lack of resources or infirmity,” said Dr.
Finlay McAlister, University of Alberta
researcher.
Because remote
monitoring (either through close telephone
follow-up with specially trained nurses or
telemonitoring involving the daily
transmission of a patient’s vital signs,
weight and symptoms to health care
providers) permits closer follow-up of
patients with heart failure, this allows for
the potential for earlier detection and
management of changes in a patient’s health.
“It must be noted that
although we have found substantial benefits
with remote monitoring for patients with
chronic heart failure, telephone monitoring
is not a treatment, but rather a different
way of providing effective care,” said Dr.
McAlister. “Therefore, programs that include
remote monitoring should not be seen as a
replacement for specialist care or
multidisciplinary care clinics, but instead
should be viewed as a potential adjunct.”