September 02, 2009 | PARC Editor | Comments 0
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Going low tech might reduce costly hospital admissions in chronic heart failure

Any hospital dealing with significant numbers of congestive heart failure patients would want to reduce costly admissions with better management for people in their homes. And Inova Mount Vernon Hospital, a 237-bed facility in Northern Virginia, is no different.

That's why it promptly embraced an idea to monitor its CHF patients' daily weight and symptoms without having to see them in a healthcare setting. So it turned to a concept that uses surprisingly simple technology: a scale and a telephone, to learn the earliest signs of fluid buildup and treat those patients before their disease gets out of control.

The process, using Pharos Innovations' Tel-Assurance Remote Patient Monitoring Platform, takes only three minutes.

Read the full story by HealthLeaders Media's Cheryl Clark.

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PARC Editor About the Author: The Patient Access Resource Center is your one-stop resource for managerial, training and compliance needs of the patient access manager. Here, you can find the latest news, benchmarking reports, newsletter articles, and practical scenarios to help your every-day needs.

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