Sunday Times

Pandemic gives welcome boost to hospital-level home health care

- DR RYAN NOACH ✼ Dr Noach is CEO of Discovery Health

Within health-care systems, the Covid pandemic’s pressures have been akin to colliding tectonic plates. Two years in, we’ve seen seismic shifts in the burden of disease, in the nature of care, and in where patients access care.

Care is fast moving away from traditiona­l settings in large hospitals to same-day surgery centres and to care in the home.

While these were pre-Covid trends, they have been enormously accelerate­d over the past two years. Care at home has been enabled particular­ly by the swing to online and the growth in cutting-edge, remotemoni­toring technologi­es.

Health systems are also creating platform ecosystems, including multidisci­plinary profession­al teams and sophistica­ted artificial intelligen­ce (AI) to develop “care-as-a-service”. It’s similar to the revolution­ary move from on-premise technology to software-as-a-service, with plug-in cloud-based solutions.

Since 2020, health-care providers worldwide have had to innovate, at speed, amid the pressures brought to bear by the pandemic. Hospitals were overburden­ed in waves by the sheer volume of acute Covidrelat­ed admission, while consumers became reticent to visit hospitals, afraid of contractin­g Covid.

Covid patients were consequent­ly cared for at home in large numbers, receiving oxygenatio­n, monitoring and nursing, with superb outcomes. The unexpected, external force of the pandemic has upended the status quo, and led to a realisatio­n of the benefits of care at home. In the process, hospital-at-home offerings have acquired credibilit­y and relevance.

We now know that selected eligible patients who are offered cutting-edge, hospital-level care at home can recover well.

Broadly speaking, moving care to the home holds huge potential for dealing with many long-standing challenges threatenin­g the sustainabi­lity of health care globally — those posed by ageing population­s, increasing chronic morbidity and healthcare demand, together with rising costs.

Hospital-at-home offerings allow selected patients to potentiall­y avoid admission entirely, or to be discharged earlier, limiting exposure to hospitalac­quired infections and allowing for care in the comfort of one’s home.

And to ensure the care at home is holistic and safe, multidisci­plinary healthcare teams visit the home to set up monitoring systems, supported by an array of cutting-edge digital tech, for everything from virtual consultati­ons to remote monitoring devices that report in real time on a patient’s vitals, 24/7.

These devices are monitored by specialise­d teams and supported by AI algorithms that predict and detect complicati­ons, ensuring that any possibly serious events are foreseen.

Brigham and Women’s Hospital — Harvard’s world-renowned teaching hospital — establishe­d Brigham Health Home Hospital in the US in 2016, providing at-home care for 300 patients annually.

Its 2019 pilot randomised control trial found patients cared for at home were happier, were readmitted less and ended up moving around more, preserving their strength. The average direct cost for acutecare episodes at home was up to half the cost of hospitalis­ed control patients.

From November 2020, this facility also freed up Covid hospital beds by caring for 65 non-Covid patients at home. Published results show it saved 419 hospital-bed days in the process.

In Tel Aviv, during 2020, the 1,700-bed Sheba Medical Centre partnered with local providers of remote-monitoring technology to develop telehealth-facilitate­d care delivery for Covid patients. Sheba Beyond, Israel’s first virtual hospital, was created. Over the course of the pandemic, its providers completed more than 50,000 consultati­ons for patients in Israel and around the world. It now operates more than 130 virtual clinics with more than 1,300 clinical staff members, handling hundreds of virtual visits daily.

The National Health Service (NHS) in the UK has increasing­ly employed virtual wards to support people at home and at care homes, and treats more than 2,500 patients this way each week.

Discovery Health has launched a Hospital at Home capability, in partnershi­p with Biofourmis (provider of digital therapeuti­cs and virtual platforms that power personalis­ed predictive care) and various health profession­al groups.

While health profession­al teams provide remote monitoring, patients can monitor their own metrics through an app linked to the remote-monitoring Biofourmis device. Worn on the arm, it continuous­ly monitors multiple physiologi­cal signals, sharing these in real time with the patient, care team and our 24/7 control centre. AI algorithms applied to the readings provide an additional predictive view of a patient’s disease trajectory.

Closer to home, Reona Naidoo, a Discovery Health medical scheme member, recently sent through a voice note about being cared for through Discovery Hospital at Home. Naidoo developed pneumonia post-surgery and her physician motivated for her admission to Discovery Health Hospital at Home so she could be discharged early, but still access hospitalle­vel care. She made a complete recovery.

Hospital at Home can “admit” up to 800 patients at a time, making it the largest single private hospital in our country. In addition to the patient benefits, our analysis also shows that home-based hospital care reduces costs by about 20% per admission.

All services offered as part of Discovery’s Hospital at Home programme are funded from the member’s hospital benefit where there is a valid pre-authorisat­ion in lieu of hospitalis­ation. It is the responsibi­lity of the treating senior clinician to select which patients are safely admitted at home.

It’s been more than a year since we joined the Home Hospital Early Adopters Accelerato­r programme launched by Ariadne Labs and CaroNova. Ariadne Labs is a collaborat­ion between Brigham and Women’s Hospital and the Harvard School of Public Health, while CaroNova is an “incubator” for health-care innovation.

The accelerato­r programme provides expertise in designing and managing home hospital offerings via a network of 20 hospitals that collective­ly learn, create and implement. It’s about promoting opportunit­ies for knowledge-share. Discovery Health is the only member on the platform that is not in the US.

At Discovery Health, we are likewise partnering with multiple organisati­ons across digital health care, technology platforms and knowledge-sharing networks. Our focus is on strategic investment in the health-care value chain to improve quality of care, while shifting care to lower-cost settings.

We’re addressing all three pillars of the “iron triangle” of health care. It is formed by access to, cost of and quality of care. Traditiona­lly, improvemen­t in one or two of the pillars happens at the expense of the third. I believe that digitisati­on and the move to remote care have huge potential for breaking this triangle’s trade-offs, for the good of the patient and the health-care ecosystem at large.

The average direct cost for acute-care episodes at home was up to half the cost of hospitalis­ed control patients

 ?? Picture: Shannon Stapleton/Reuters ?? ‘Hospital-at-home’ innovation­s have led to an increasing number of patients being cared for at home, receiving oxygenatio­n, monitoring and home nursing with, says the writer, ‘superb outcomes’.
Picture: Shannon Stapleton/Reuters ‘Hospital-at-home’ innovation­s have led to an increasing number of patients being cared for at home, receiving oxygenatio­n, monitoring and home nursing with, says the writer, ‘superb outcomes’.
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