Telecare
Telemedicine as
support for chronic disease management
With the decline in numbers of doctors and experienced nurses and
the consequent increasing pressure on the acute sector, coupled with
increasing patient expectation, Julia Davey, RGN Community
Respiratory Nurse Specialist at Central Surrey Health, asks how can
the growing problem of chronic disease management be addressed?
September 2007
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is one of the most
common respiratory conditions in adults in the developed world and
poses an enormous burden to society, both in terms of direct cost to
healthcare services and indirect costs to society through loss of
productivity.
Nearly 1 million people in England and Wales are diagnosed with
COPD every year, with the NHS spending around £818 million a year on
it.
COPD is thought of as the ‘Cinderella disease’ in medicine and it
has received scant attention in comparison to heart disease, asthma
and lung cancer. Attitudes are, however, beginning to change and
there will be a national service framework for COPD in 2008-9 which
will recognise that chronic ill health and death due to COPD are
preventable in most cases.
But despite this backdrop of difficulties and barriers, the COPD
Community Service at Central Surrey Health, which covers a catchment
area of 50 square miles with a caseload of 300 terminal COPD
patients, is now witnessing significant improvements in patient
care, including the reduction in the severity of exacerbations,
hospitalisation, maintained lung function and subsequent quality of
life for those with COPD.
COPD services – goals and objectives
In 2001, I was employed as a community respiratory nurse
specialist, primarily to see patients who were unable to attend
hospital appointments, and to act as a liaison between primary and
secondary care. As the caseload increased to 150 patients and with
over 70 requiring home visits on a regular basis, it was becoming
increasingly problematic to monitor patients effectively and,
subsequently, to keep them out of hospital — simply because of the
difficulty in searching for up-to-date information in the patients’
paper notes.
A change of approach was required and in 2004 the COPD community
service was initiated by East Elmbridge & Mid Surrey PCT to address
these issues.
The aim of the service was to provide high quality personalised
care to patients at home, therefore reducing the over-reliance on
secondary care. There was also a desire to change the emphasis from
a reactive, crisis management service to a more proactive
preventative partnership approach and to promote multidisciplinary
collaboration.
With limited resources, the following objectives were set:
- people with severe disease were to be seen at home;
- patients and their carers were to be fully informed about
their disease by the nurse and given advice on self-management
for exacerbations and educated about the use of oxygen and
safety precautions;
- patients and carers were to be taught to recognise changes
in condition and encouraged to contact the respiratory nurse or
GP directly;
- we pledged to improve ‘patient empowerment’, to encourage
patients to take an interest in their own disease and day-to-day
care; and to
- reduce patient admissions to hospital.
To achieve these objectives we had to find a more-effective way
to monitor patients by finding suitable technology that could be set
up in the patient’s home while enabling the development of an
electronic patient record.
In 2004, I heard about a system called Excelicare Direct, a software programme developed by AxSys
Technology. The system was being used at Glasgow Royal Infirmary for
the home monitoring of patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Through
the use of this computerised telephone monitoring system staff could
detect any deterioration in the patient’s condition without having
to physically see them. This fulfilled the criteria required for the
COPD patient group.
How the system works
Excelicare went live in September 2004 and now provides a
patient-focused telemedicine solution for the remote assessment and
monitoring of 250 registered COPD patients. It has been set up to
ensure that the correct treatment protocols are followed while
documenting the clinical care pathway for each patient.
The system works by patients placing a call to the system
whenever their symptoms change. The patient dials a dedicated number
and enters their secure PIN number and date of birth, which
identifies them to Excelicare and opens their individual patient
record. The system welcomes the patient by name and delivers a
personalised questionnaire over the phone, relating to their signs
and symptoms.
The patient responds by pressing the appropriate touch tone keys
and all responses are recorded into forms in the patient record as
Excelicare has the power to interpret a patient’s responses. After
the call, a report is created which generates an alert if it has
detected deterioration in the patient’s condition.
This alert is automatically sent to the respiratory nurse via a
text message. The nurse then calls the patient to give appropriate
advice or, if necessary, to make a home visit. After an incident,
the nurse will enter her clinical notes directly into the system and
clear the alert.
Today’s model of care for COPD patients dictates that there is a
change of emphasis from crisis management to preventative
partnership; that the patients find the system acceptable, although
nothing can take the place of a personal visit; frequency of home
visits is decreased, allowing more patients to be managed by the
same number of nurses and the use of electronic monitoring is an
adjunct to home visiting.
Also that embedded rules and alerts in the electronic patient
record ensure that manual intervention occurs when required; type
and extent of data capture at home is not restricted; patients
become more actively involved in their own treatment; they are given
speedy access to their nurse for advice and care; the inconvenience,
cost and time incurred in travelling to clinics for investigations
or to see the consultant is minimised.
Results and benefits
Results published demonstrate that considerable improvements have
been made since the establishment of COPD Services and to date those
benefits include:
- the maximum response time for
answering an alert is now 15 minutes;
- the severity of exacerbations has
been reduced, which is helping to maintain lung function and
subsequent quality of life;
- since starting the Respiratory
Service in 2001, hospital admission for patients seen at
home has fallen by 40% and the average length of stay in
hospital; has been reduced to 5.9 days, representing a 26%
reduction in bed days;
- the target of saving 10% of
admissions every year from 2007 is now achievable;
- considerable cost savings have
been made through the outpatient nurse-led clinics. In the
first eight months of the Service starting £28,620 was saved
for the PCT by moving the clinics to community hospitals
from the acute trust;
- consultations made by phone or
email have increased;
- the system supports integrated
care and enables establishment of clinical networks;
- quality data can be entered from
any site and care can be delivered from anywhere; and
- more patients can be managed
without having to increase the number of staff.
There is no doubt that by introducing patient-centred
telemedicine there has been a substantial improvement in healthcare
delivery. By having an electronic patient record it has been
possible to implement and monitor ‘best practice’ while maintaining
clinical effectiveness of intermediate care and clinicians benefit
in that it allows close, accurate monitoring of patients without
increasing the load on clinics while improving the overall outcome
of treatments.
The future
Excelicare is easily transferable to other disease areas and I
believe telemedicine is the future for modern medicine, especially
for the management of chronic disease. I also think it is important
to encourage nurses to embrace the use of technology and to learn
new skills if the electronic health record is to fulfil its promise
as part of the National Programme for IT (NPfIT).
A multidisciplinary COPD network group has also been set up,
meeting every two months to support nursing practice and to improve
patient care and a clinical record is now in place for each COPD
patient (first in England). The ongoing target is to treat the
majority of COPD patients at home to offer them support and,
ultimately, a dignified death at home rather than in an acute
hospital bed.
I would also like to see Excelicare linked to the acute sector to
give other clinical staff instant access to patients’ up-to-date
records. To me it seems eminently sensible to have all professionals
associated with the care of patients joined up. We are already
working on creating links with other systems such as picture
archiving and communications systems (PACS), so we can scan images
direct into Excelicare, import other documents like sleep studies
and possibly x-rays. This will give us a complete patient record
which will enable GPs and consultants access to the record.
It’s about moving care into the community.
|