Virtual Health to Expand Health Capacity in the Face of COVID-19
Extensive measures like social-distancing and shelter-in-place are taken to mitigate the impact. However, the demand could still be at about 200,000 patients requiring ICU hospitalization, leading to potential demand—capacity gaps.
T As the COVID-19 pandemic sweeps the world, it has illustrated cracks in the global healthcare ecosystem. As a result, there in a massive spike in demand for ambulatory, inpatient services and virtual health. The most critical areas likely to be impacted include the healthcare infrastructure, workforce and hospital equipment. From the infrastructure perspective, the U.S healthcare system is currently equipped with 46,000 ICU beds, operating at near full capacity on a regular basis.
Extensive measures like social-distancing and shelter-in-place are taken to mitigate the impact. However, the demand could still be at about 200,000 patients requiring ICU hospitalization, leading to potential demand—capacity gaps.
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) and the U.S Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have shared their predictions on the potential surge in demand that is further expected to grow in the coming weeks. There is a shifting focus on flattening the curve — to address the hospital demand-capacity concern.
The healthcare capacity in the present scenario is static and cannot be exceeded. The federal government has taken several initiatives like patients over paperwork, Hospitals without walls to facilitate the temporary expansion of healthcare settings. However, besides infrastructure and equipment constraints, there is also a potential risk of a declining workforce – on the following scenarios.
These factors may contribute to the declining health capacity from the workforce perspective.
The health capacity decline could mean deferred testing and care potentially increasing risks of incidents — that stem from undiagnosed and untreated individuals. This could be further influenced by supply-side shortage.
Virtual health including telemedicine services and remote patient monitoring are the most secure ways to increase healthcare system capacity.
The federal government has temporarily waived-off policies and eased restrictions in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. CMS has announced policies that augment the potential and reach of telemedicine services—like Medicare telehealth visits, virtual check-ins and e-visits Furthermore, the agency has relaxed the enforcement of HIPAA policies to harness the potential of virtual health visits through non-compliant telehealth platforms. The relaxation of these policies is key to the rising adoption of virtual health.
To learn more on the latest updates to telemedicine codes, click here
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