Welcome to HIMSS

This site uses technologies such as cookies to provide a better user experience by personalising content and ads, analysing web traffic and trends, and improving site operations. We may share information about your use of the site with third parties in accordance with our Privacy Policy. By continuing to use this site you agree that we can save cookies on your device, unless you have disabled them. You can change your cookie settings at any time by visiting our Cookie Policy, but parts of our site may not function correctly without them.

Skip to main content
Email

The latest news in Healthcare IT – straight to your inbox.

Home
  • Main Menu
  • Subscribe
  • Topics
    • Video
    • Analytics
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Cloud Computing
    • EHR
    • Government & Policy
    • Interoperability
    • Patient Engagement
    • Population Health
    • Precision Medicine
    • Privacy & Security
    • Telehealth
    • Women In Health IT

Regions

  • ANZ
  • ASIA
  • EMEA
  • Global Edition
Global Edition
Connected Health

With Epic-linked RPM, Lee Health is sending fewer people to hospitals and ERs

Not too long ago, about 17% of remotely monitored patients needed a higher level of care. Today it's in the 3% to 5% range, keeping more people in their homes and coordinating their care.
By Bill Siwicki
January 10, 2023
09:35 AM

Gulf Coast Medical Center, one of Lee Health's four acute care facilities

Photo: Lee Health

Dr. Zsolt Kulcsar, medical director at Lee Health based in Fort Myers, Florida, says what he has learned in recent years is that telemedicine is great, but it also is a little limiting. There is only so much one can solve via a video interaction.

THE PROBLEM

"When the first wave of COVID-19 kind of died down, we met with all of our heads of departments, including cardiology, pulmonary and other key service lines, and we asked them about the limitation of that telehealth interaction," he recalled.

"What we learned is that we needed data," he continued. "We couldn't make data-driven decisions because we didn't have blood pressures, we didn't have oxygenation saturations, we didn't have weights, we didn't have the data that goes with the clinical decision-making."

The caregivers only had the patient, and they were able to examine a few things via video, but they did not have that supporting data to drive decisions and management.

That's where remote patient monitoring came in – delivering devices into the home that can collect clinical data, including blood pressure, oxygen and weight. But more important to Kulcsar, RPM also could collect questionnaires from patients that could help detect early clues of an exacerbation, decompensation or deterioration.

"The program we built here is an RPM shop, and it has the tools we need to collect that data," he said. "That was important pre-COVID, and it's important even more so post-COVID.

"There is a term called 'virtual first' that we use," he added. "For example, a patient would be in their living room and ping the doctor to let them know they have a specific condition they are concerned about, and they're wondering what should they do about it?"

"Our digital footprint all of a sudden expanded from more of a passive monitoring program to monitoring plus intervention."

Dr. Zsolt Kulcsar, Lee Health

Patients can do this from their living room, as opposed to driving to urgent care or the emergency department. Then, if they need to drive to the urgent care or ER, they're told to do so.

"To go even further, some patients don't want to go into the office and sit in a waiting room," said Jonathan Witenko, system director of virtual health and telemedicine. "Then there are patients who want to be seen and have that relationship with their physician. So, it's also a little bit of what is the patient preference and what is the patient appetite, and figuring out what is right for the patient.

"Telehealth isn't meant to just be a replacement for in-person visits – it's a complement," he continued. "After someone is seen by their primary care physician, they can use telehealth to check in and spot-check, so the patient doesn't need to physically come into the office as much, but they still can get the personalized care they need to help with their condition."

PROPOSAL

Lee Health's remote patient monitoring technology and services vendor is Health Recovery Solutions.

"They're a high-performing vendor and forward-thinking," Witenko contended. "They can help deliver technology and set it up in the patient's home. This helps us collect that data-driven information we need to provide the patient with optimal care when and where they need it."

Kulcsar reported that the health system was able to get up and running two days after Hurricane Ian passed through the community in September 2022 and continue monitoring patients' conditions.

"Our digital footprint all of a sudden expanded from more of a passive monitoring program to monitoring plus intervention," he recalled. "Those interventions are really what matters to our health system to keep people in the home or transition from the hospital into the home and to do that safely.

"We were helping to oversee the data and then escalating it to the appropriate specialists," he added. "We're also helping to handle those situations in-house."

MARKETPLACE

There are many vendors of telemedicine technology and services on the health IT market today. Healthcare IT News published a special report highlighting many of these vendors with detailed descriptions of their products. Click here to read the special report.

MEETING THE CHALLENGE

Health Recovery Solutions is able to feed information into Lee Health's electronic health record, Epic, so all providers involved in patient care are able to know a patient's entire clinical record and the continuity of care is present throughout the entire process.

"To add to that, I could call a cardiologist or text message them that their patient's blood pressure or weight went up over the last few days, and have them take a look and see what they think is clinically worrisome," Kulcsar said. "And if something is an issue, we can coordinate services within the home, because everyone is able to see what we're seeing.

"We have a full clinical team, including someone who does daily intake interactions with patients," he continued. "There is a customer service representative and three nurses who do the day-to-day analysis of the data and make escalations."

"Telehealth isn't meant to just be a replacement for in-person visits – it's a complement."

Jonathan Witenko, Lee Health

Lee has a clinical team of two advanced providers and a medical director to oversee the data, coordinate the care and reach out to coordinating specialists and internists.

"We can just act on it," Kulcsar explained. "We see it. We get alerted and we make a plan."

Lee Health has officially received its first payment for RPM services rendered. The services rendered via the RPM team are billed and have been reimbursed.

RESULTS

Lee Health is sending fewer people to hospitals and emergency departments.

"A few months ago, about 17% of our remotely monitored patients needed a higher level of care," Kulcsar reported. "Now we're hovering around the 3% to 5% range. We've been able to keep people in their homes and coordinate that care.

"We've also partnered with DispatchHealth, which delivers care directly to the patient's home," he continued. "They can do blood draws, X-rays and deploy medications, and that helps us a lot."

Surveys show Lee has highly engaged patients who are very satisfied with their overall care, equipment and the program itself.

"Our vendor said the adherence rate is at 80%, meaning the patients enrolled in the program also get their biometric readings and stick with doing so 80% of the time in a typical month, which is pretty impressive," Kulcsar added.

USING FCC AWARD FUNDS

Lee Health was awarded $1 million by the FCC telehealth grant fund to help out with its remote patient monitoring program.

"We used these funds for the remote patient monitoring program, the placement of cameras inside of the NICU at each bassinet so family members can see the baby growing and developing while he or she is under our care, and to develop our telehealth infrastructure," Witenko explained.

"We also are taking steps to position ourselves for the future and be proactive instead of reactive," he continued. "COVID and Hurricane Ian helped us see challenges and address them, and now we're working to put those solutions in place."

The provider organization has laid the groundwork, Kulcsar added.

"We have clinical staffing," he said. "We have the right technologies and now people are approaching me about other specialties that could benefit from these implementations, such as oncology. We're looking at different data, responding differently to it, and coordinating with another specialist.

"Now you can get really creative and it helps with digital transformation, as well," he concluded. "It is step one and two for digital transformation and now the heavy work can really begin."

Follow Bill's HIT coverage on LinkedIn: Bill Siwicki
Email the writer: bsiwicki@himss.org
Healthcare IT News is a HIMSS Media publication.

Topics: 
Connected Health, Patient Engagement, Telehealth

More regional news

Patient does a virtual care consult

Castlight Health intros virtual urgent care for members

By
Mike Miliard
April 18, 2025
HIMSSCast logo

HIMSSCast: Should every healthcare organization have an AI strategy?

By
Mike Miliard
April 18, 2025
Nurse checks tablet to communicate on shift

Zoom launches agentic AI-powered mobile comms for frontline staff

By
Andrea Fox
April 18, 2025
Want to get more stories like this one? Get daily news updates from Healthcare IT News.
Your subscription has been saved.
Something went wrong. Please try again.

Top Story

Nurse checks tablet to communicate on shift
Zoom launches agentic AI-powered mobile comms for frontline staff

Most Read

2025: AI enhances personalized care; caregiver experience in the spotlight
Millie secures $12M to expand its maternity care platform
Texting the CEO proves wildly popular at Banner Health
DEA's draft special telehealth reg rule should be tossed, healthcare orgs say
How one practice helps care for almost half of New Mexico's pregnancies with telemedicine
Thailand's first int'l private hospital goes 'all the way' with EMR

Research

White Papers

More Whitepapers

Telehealth
Create secure, connected omnichannel communications
Telehealth
Let us guide you to HIPAA compliance
Cloud Computing
How a cloud communications platform puts connection at the center of care

Webinars

More Webinars

Analytics
Standby Eligibility and Claims Solutions: Diversify Your Risk & Ensure Business Continuity
Interoperability
Nursing Leadership, Operational Innovation, and Emerging Technologies with AONL
Artificial Intelligence
Loving the AI Revolution: How Automation is Humanizing Healthcare and Improving Provider Well-Being

Video

Ilir Kullolli, Stanford Medicine Children's Health_Las Vegas skyline Photo by halbergman/E+/Getty Images
HIMSS-ACCE working together to advance digital health
Vik Bajaj, Foresite Labs_Medical research Photo by Edward Jenner/pexels.com
Healthcare research is being affected by federal budget cuts
Priyanka Jain, Evvy_Hand holding sample vial Photo courtesy of Evvy
How one women's health startup tests fertility outcomes
Keisuke Nakagawa, UC San Diego Health_Las Vegas skyline Photo by halbergman/E+/Getty Images
Can technology help bring the human touch back to medicine?

More Stories

Lee Kim, HIMSS_Las Vegas skyline Photo by halbergman/E+/Getty Images
Past year's data breaches often stemmed from remediable cybersecurity gaps
Cathy Menkiena, Health Catalyst_Las Vegas skyline Photo by halbergman/E+/Getty Images
Innovative – and useful – tech is key to empowering care teams
Sameer Sethi of Hackensack Meridian Health on AI
Hackensack Meridian Chief AI Officer on the intersection of business and technology
Doctor checking and tracking information on a computer
HHS updates regulatory guides for the safe use of EHRs
Sameer Sethi, Hackensack Meridian Health_Computer neural network concept Photo by dan/Moment/Getty Images
Chief AI Officer on becoming one and working with the C-suite
Businessperson signing piece of paper
White House releases guidance on federal AI use and procurement
Dr. Ateev Mehrotra of Brown University School of Public Health on telehealth policy
Brown University policy expert talks about the future of telehealth flexibilities
Micky Tripathi, former HHS acting chief AI officer
Former National Coordinator headed to Mayo Clinic, reports say
Home

More News

  • MobiHealthNews
  • Healthcare Finance News
  • Healthcare Payers News

Newsletter Signup

HIMSS25 European Health Conference & Exhibition
HIMSS25 European Health Conference & Exhibition
Get ready for knowledge-sharing, all the latest innovations, and in-depth demos with Europe's most influential healthcare community.
10 - 12 June, 2025 | Paris
Learn More
AI in Healthcare Forum
AI in Healthcare Forum
The HIMSS AI in Healthcare Forum cuts through the hype to showcase real-world examples illustrating the transformative potential, and realistic challenges of AI application across the care continuum.
10 - 11 July 2025 | New York
Learn More

Footer Menu

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Reprints
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy

© 2025 Healthcare IT News is a publication of HIMSS Media

X

Topics

  • Video
  • Analytics
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Cloud Computing
  • EHR
  • Government & Policy
  • Interoperability
  • Patient Engagement
  • Population Health
  • Precision Medicine
  • Privacy & Security
  • Telehealth
  • Women In Health IT

Career

  • Events
  • Jobs
  • Research Papers
  • Webinars

More

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Special Projects
  • Video

Regions

  • ANZ
  • ASIA
  • EMEA
  • Global Edition

The Daily Brief Newsletter

Get daily news updates from Healthcare IT News.

Search form

Top Stories

Nurse checks tablet to communicate on shift
Zoom launches agentic AI-powered mobile comms for frontline staff
HIMSSCast logo
HIMSSCast: Should every healthcare organization have an AI strategy?
Vik Bajaj, Foresite Labs_Medical research Photo by Edward Jenner/pexels.com
Healthcare research is being affected by federal budget cuts