Las Vegas Review-Journal

Telemedici­ne catching on with older patients

Interest grows as opportunit­y, payment options expanding

- By Luaran Neergaard and Emily Swanson The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Every morning, 92-year-old Sidney Kramer wraps a blood pressure cuff around his arm and steps on a scale, and readings of his heart health beam to a team of nurses — and to his daughter’s smartphone — miles from his Maryland home.

Red flags? A nurse immediatel­y calls, a form of telemedici­ne that is helping Kramer live independen­tly by keeping his congestive heart failure under tight control.

“It’s reassuring both psychologi­cally and physically.

The way he’s put it to me, it’s like having a doctor appointmen­t every morning,” said Miriam Dubin, Kramer’s daughter.

The vast majority of older Americans and their caregivers are ready to give virtual health care a try: Nearly 9 in 10 adults ages 40 and older would be comfortabl­e using at least one type of telemedici­ne for themselves or an aging loved one, says a new poll from The Associated PRESS-NORC Center for Public

Affairs Research.

But they want to make sure that an e-visit or other remote care is just as good as they’d get in person, and that their health informatio­n stays private, according to the survey released Thursday.

Long considered an option mainly for improving access to health care in rural areas with few doctors, telemedici­ne is gaining ground with tech-savvy younger consumers — they text their physician with questions or Skype with a mild complaint. For seniors with chronic illnesses or mobility problems that make simply reaching a doctor’s office an ordeal, telehealth could be more than a convenienc­e. The graying population is prompting serious questions about how the nation will provide enough quality long-term care.

But while private insurance increasing­ly covers certain services such as a video visit, seniors have had a harder time because Medicare tightly restricts what it will pay for.

That’s starting to change, with a law Congress passed last winter that expands Medicare coverage for such options as video visits to diagnose stroke symptoms or check on home dialysis patients. Also, Medicare Advantage programs used by a third of beneficiar­ies can start offering additional telehealth options.

“While the interest is huge, one of the big barriers remains reimbursem­ent,” said Johns Hopkins University telemedici­ne chief

Dr. Ingrid Zimmer-galler, who has turned to grants to help fund such services as telepsychi­atry for dementia patients. The new law

“is really a huge step in the right direction. It certainly doesn’t cover everything.”

As access for seniors promises to grow, the AP-NORC Center poll shows widespread interest in telehealth. More than half of adults of all ages would be comfortabl­e with a video visit via Skype or Facetime to discuss medication­s, for ongoing care of a chronic illness or even for an urgent health concern.

In fact, adults 40 and older are just as open to at least some forms of telemedici­ne as those under 40, with one exception: The older crowd is slightly less comfortabl­e discussing health care by text.

Among caregivers, 87 percent say they’d be interested in using at least one form of telemedici­ne for that person’s medical needs.

Just 12 percent of adults say they wouldn’t use any form of telemedici­ne.

 ?? Pablo Martinez Monsivais ?? The Associated Press Sidney Kramer, 92, who suffers from congestive heart failure and whose vitals are transmitte­d daily to his nurses, talks with his daughter Miriam Dubin.
Pablo Martinez Monsivais The Associated Press Sidney Kramer, 92, who suffers from congestive heart failure and whose vitals are transmitte­d daily to his nurses, talks with his daughter Miriam Dubin.
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