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Would you feel safe being treated on a ‘VIRTUAL WARD’in your home?

It’s the radical solution being trialled to tackle a shortage of NHS hospital beds. As patients with conditions from dementia to heart failure and even cancer receive care remotely...

- By RACHEL ELLIS

For anyone with a chronic condition, key challenges include the need for regular checks, unsuitable appointmen­t times, costly parking and hours hanging about in hospital as clinics overrun — let alone the discomfort from their illness.

But technologi­cal advances mean many could have their health closely monitored in their own homes, rather than in hospital.

In fact, for some 280,000 nHS patients in england, home monitoring and ‘virtual wards’ (more frequent remote checks when patients need more intensive monitoring) are already a reality.

and by March 2023, a further 500,000 could be enrolled in home- monitoring programmes, with 25,000 at any one time being treated on virtual wards by 2024.

Launching the Plan for Digital Health and Social Care last month, then-Health Secretary

Heart patients will monitor their own blood pressure, pulse and weight

Sajid Javid said the measures would allow patients to ‘take more control of their own care at home, picking up problems sooner and seeking help earlier’ and ensure ‘ the nHS is set to meet the challenges of 2048 — not 1948’.

The idea is that, with kit such as blood pressure monitors and pulse oximeters (to log blood oxygen levels), plus training and support, patients can monitor their health at home and upload readings via an app on a smartphone or computer to an online ‘hub’.

The results are then monitored by a medical team or a computer programme. any problem detected is flagged to a clinician, who may prescribe treatments such as antibiotic­s if they suspect a urinary tract infection or steroids for asthma — or, if necessary, recommend hospital admission.

Heart failure, lung conditions, stroke, urinary tract infections, arthritis, dementia and even cancer are among the illnesses that can be monitored, and in some cases treated, remotely.

Patients at risk of urinary tract infections may be asked to test their urine and take their temperatur­e to check for signs of infection. Those with heart failure will check their blood pressure, pulse and weight (a sudden increase suggests water retention, a sign that the heart is not pumping effectivel­y and medication may not be working). Those with asthma and lung conditions will check lung function with a spirometer (measuring the amount of air you exhale in a breath).

Meanwhile, cancer patients may be advised to send in temperatur­e readings as a raised temperatur­e can be a sign of an infection. Stroke patients may be asked to check their blood pressure and those with arthritis record symptoms daily via an app.

Home monitoring sounds appealing because, unlike in hospital, it means patients can eat, sleep and go out when they please, or have as many visitors as they like, while their health is kept under review.

The theory is that this allows patients to be discharged from hospital sooner or avoids them being admitted in the first place by picking up problems earlier.

For instance, if a patient with chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease (CoPD) — an umbrella term for chronic lung diseases — has abnormal temperatur­e, oxygen and pulse readings, this suggests an infection.

Stepping in with treatments or medication ‘rescue packs’ given to patients in advance — in the case of CoPD, antibiotic­s and steroids — could prevent the patient’s admission to hospital.

avoiding unnecessar­y hospital stays also saves the nHS the £400 a day it costs to run a hospital bed and frees up beds and medical staff for other patients.

But is greater use of remote monitoring of patients in this way really the nHS magic bullet?

Some experts have reservatio­ns, as certain patients fear, or are unable to use, such technology.

‘relying on smartphone­s and apps to provide healthcare immediatel­y excludes millions, particular­ly older people — some of whom won’t have internet access and others who are not comfortabl­e using the technology,’ says Dennis reed, from the patients’ rights group Silver Voices.

‘This trend to digital-only as the fall-back position is worrying as it could make it difficult for some to access nHS services. We need to make sure there is an equally accessible alternativ­e for those who find it difficult to work with apps, such as those with dexterity or eyesight problems.’

The Government is pinning its hopes on greater use of ‘telehealth’ technology to boost capacity in the nHS, which has been falling over the past decade. It wants to make a dent in its burgeoning waiting lists, currently standing at a record 6.48 million people.

Last month, nHS england chief executive amanda Pritchard admitted that too many nHS beds had been cut. Some 25,000 have been lost since 2010/11, with fewer beds per head of population now than in comparable countries.

There is growing evidence that technology can allow patients to avoid hospital and be cared for effectivel­y at home. However, the results are mixed.

In 2016, Cochrane — the independen­t body that reviews existing studies — looked at 16 trials involving more than 1,800 older people who were cared for at home rather than in hospital for conditions such as stroke or CoPD.

It concluded that home monitoring ‘ may provide an effective alternativ­e to inpatient care for a select group of elderly patients requiring hospital admission’.

Those treated at home were more likely still to be living in their own homes after six months and seemed ‘more satisfied than those who are in hospital’, it found.

The review noted that home care may be cheaper than that in hospital, although it failed to take into account the cost of family and friends providing care at home.

More recently, ‘virtual wards’ were introduced during the pandemic, using pulse oximeters to monitor Covid patients.

The infection can lead to low blood oxygen levels, which can be fatal if not identified and treated. But some Covid sufferers were arriving in hospital too late as low blood oxygen levels don’t always cause warning symptoms.

To address this problem, remote home monitoring using pulse oximeters was introduced on the nHS for clinically vulnerable patients diagnosed with Covid.

an analysis of data from 37 local health authoritie­s in england that offered the service between november 2020 and February 2021 found that it had ‘no significan­t impact on outcomes’, reported

Experts fear many will not be able to use the technology

the jo urn ale Clinical Medicine in March this year.

However, when more than 3,500 patients with COPD, heart failure and type 2 diabetes from 89 GP practices in Liverpool had their health monitored at home, there was a 22 per cent reduction in the number of emergency hospital admissions compared with a matched group who did not receive the care, a 2019 study in the journal BMJ Open found.

The patients were given a tablet computer wirelessly connected to weight scales, a blood pressure device, glucose monitor and pulse oximeter and they submitted daily readings for at least nine weeks. They also received advice from clinical staff.

The readings were monitored by a computer programme that spots health changes — and any alerts were then sent to a clinical team. On average, each patient triggered an alert nine days a month.

The study, however, found home monitoring was more beneficial for some conditions than others.

The 171 heart failure patients in the study who had home monitoring saw the biggest drop in emergency admissions, probably because the condition has ‘the worst performanc­e in terms of hospital admissions and readmissio­ns in the NHS’, says Nick Hartshorne- Evans, chief executive of heart failure charity Pumping Marvellous.

Heart failure, which affects some 900,000 people in the UK, means the heart is not pumping as effectivel­y as it should, often due to damage from a heart attack or ageing. It can cause breathless­ness, swollen ankles and exhaustion.

‘With the average heart failure hospital admission being ten days, on the basis of such findings monitoring or treating patients at home would not only be a massive benefit to the patients but would also save the NHS £4,000 per patient stay,’ says NickHartsh­orne-Evans.

Chris Gale, a consultant cardiologi­st and a professor of cardiovasc­ular medicine at the University of Leeds, agrees.

‘Home monitoring of heart failure can help patients to manage their own condition and means fewer hospital visits,’ he says. ‘ It allows appropriat­e care in the appropriat­e place.’

In May, a virtual heart failure ward — only the second in the country — was set up by Mersey Care NHS Foundation Trust and Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.

So far about 40 patients have been managed on the ward, each of whom was ‘admitted’ when their condition worsened; normally they would have gone to hospital.

During their ‘stay’ of about 14 days, in the comfort of their own homes, the patients have observatio­ns taken three times a day including temperatur­e checks, blood pressure, oxygen levels and ECGs of their heart to see how well it is pumping — and whether they need to attend hospital as an outpatient for intravenou­s diuretics to remove excess fluid which may be worsening their condition.

There is also a daily virtual ward round with a consultant heart specialist (including at weekends).

The aim is to recruit 200 patients in Cheshire and Merseyside by November, which it is estimated could save about 1,500 bed days in hospitals and £540,000 in costs.

However, Professor Gale says, patients with complex health problems will still need to be seen in hospital and more scientific research is required to show that home monitoring ‘improves care, outcomes and is cost effective’.

Relying on technology in health monitoring, though, is not without risks. Accuracy of the readings depends on the quality of the devices used. Equipment can fail or patients can make mistakes using it, and not seeing a patient face-to-face means that subtle visual cues that suggest changes in their health may be missed.

For example, pulse oximeters work less well on patients with darker skin. The devices measure how much light is absorbed by the tissue of the finger: dark skin absorbs more light than fair skin, giving a false high reading when the patient’s blood oxygen levels may be actually perilously low.

Some fear inaccurate readings may have contribute­d to the high death rate from Covid among black and Asian people at the height of the pandemic. Meanwhile, a UK survey of 1,500 arthritis patients and their doctors, published in the journal Rheumatolo­gy last month, revealed 93 per cent of doctors and 86 per cent of patients ‘ rated telemedici­ne as worse than face-to-face for assessment accuracy’.

‘ Misdiagnos­es and other inaccuraci­es were frequently reported and often attributed to the absence of examinatio­ns and visual cues,’ researcher­s said.

When it comes to dementia, which can be monitored with routine health observatio­ns, such as pulse and temperatur­e, plus sensors in the house to show how often a patient leaves it, Kirstie Kalonji, policy manage at the Alzheimer’s Society, agrees that telemedici­ne is not ideal.

She says: ‘ Technology alone cannot address the lack of postdiagno­stic support faced by too many people with dementia.

‘It can play an important part in helping people with dementia live well with the condition for as long as possible but it must be accompanie­d by improved specialist support.’ Lung patients also remain sceptical.

‘Eighty per cent of people with asthma want their annual asthma

A big question is: who will staff the telehealth scheme?

review to be carried out in person and 55 per cent of people with COPD prefer to receive face-toface pulmonary rehab (a physical exercise and advice programme for people with the condition),’ says Harriet Edwards, head of policy and external affairs at the charity Asthma + Lung UK.

She points out that some aspects of care, such as checking someone is using their inhaler properly, are more effective face-to-face.

And one big question is: who is going to staff this NHS digital revolution? Data submitted from patients monitored at home is often initially assessed by a computer programme, designed to spot unusual results. This then sends an alert to medical staff for assessment.

But ‘ you don’t need highlytrai­ned medical profession­als to run the home monitoring,’ says Nigel Edwards, former head of the NHS Confederat­ion and chief executive of the think tank the Nuffield Trust. ‘You just need an experience­d clinician who can step in where needs be.’

The Government has announced it will create 10,500 data and technology roles by 2025 plus

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 ?? Pictures: GETTY/ISTOCKPHOT­O, WARREN SMITH ??
Pictures: GETTY/ISTOCKPHOT­O, WARREN SMITH

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