Healthcare Business Review

Advertise

with us

  • Europe
    • US
    • EUROPE
    • APAC
    • CANADA
    • LATAM
  • Home
  • Sections
    Business Process Outsourcing
    Compliance & Risk Management
    Consulting Service
    Facility Management Services
    Financial Services
    Healthcare Concierge
    Healthcare Construction
    Healthcare Education
    Healthcare Marketing
    Healthcare Procurement
    Healthcare Staffing
    Healthcare Tech
    Medical Transcription and Translation
    Medical Transportation
    Psychological Services
    Radiology
    Therapy Services
    Waste Management
    Business Process Outsourcing
    Compliance & Risk Management
    Consulting Service
    Facility Management Services
    Financial Services
    Healthcare Concierge
    Healthcare Construction
    Healthcare Education
    Healthcare Marketing
    Healthcare Procurement
    Healthcare Staffing
    Healthcare Tech
    Medical Transcription and Translation
    Medical Transportation
    Psychological Services
    Radiology
    Therapy Services
    Waste Management
  • Leadership Perspectives
  • Care Strategies
  • News
  • Conferences
  • CXO Awards
  • About Us
×
#

Healthcare Business Review Weekly Brief

Be first to read the latest tech news, Industry Leader's Insights, and CIO interviews of medium and large enterprises exclusively from Healthcare Business Review

Subscribe

loading

Thank you for Subscribing to Healthcare Business Review Weekly Brief

  • Home
  • Leadership Perspectives

A featured contribution from Leadership Perspectives: a curated forum reserved for leaders nominated by our subscribers and vetted by the Healthcare Business Review Advisory Board.

ProHealth Care

Jessica Zuercher, Director, Continuum of Care

Wisconsin system finds success with telemonitoring for COVID-19 patients

ProHealth Care is known in southeastern Wisconsin for outstanding care and innovation. The Waukesha County based system includes ProHealth Oconomowoc Memorial Hospital, ProHealth Waukesha Memorial Hospital, ProHealth Waukesha Memorial Hospital-Mukwonago, ProHealth Rehabilitation Hospital of Wisconsin, ProHealth Medical Group clinics, the UW Health Cancer Center at ProHealth Care, ProHealthAngelsGrace Hospice, ProHealth Home Care and other entities.


Since March 2020, ProHealth has provided telemonitoring services for nearly 1,700 adult patients at risk for COVID-19 complications. During surges in the pandemic, 100 or more patients have been monitored on a given day. Over 300 telemonitoring patients have received oxygen equipment and education under the program.


Telemonitoring is considered for patients in the community or discharging to the community who have had a respiratory-related diagnosis, suspected case of COVID-19, or are recovering from COVID-19. ProHealth’s telemonitoring nursing team provides the remote monitoring along with nursing assessment and intervention.


“The process for COVID-19 patients streamlines care and communication for patients presenting either for an office visit, urgent care visit, emergency department visit or upon hospital discharge,” said Jessica Zuercher, ProHealth’s director of the Continuum of Care. “The goal is to make sure patients receive the appropriate monitoring and follow-up from all care settings.”


Follow-up care is based on a patient’s risk of complications and severity of symptoms. It may include referrals to emergency care, scheduling of follow-up virtual or office visits, or visits from ProHealth Home Care’s staff.


Need for telemonitoring


ProHealth identified telemonitoring early on in the pandemic as a way to help COVID-19 patients avoid a higher level of care. It was a clear solution for providing connected care to patients who were able to care for themselves safely at home.


System leaders also recognized that telemonitoring would help prevent disease spread while optimizing provider and staff availability for patients with more concerning symptoms.


Telemonitoring patients must have a ProHealth primary care provider and meet risk-stratified medical criteria. They must have the ability to provide self-care or have an appropriate caregiver, have a smartphone or computer and Wi-Fi for MyChart use, and speak English or Spanish.


Upon referral to the telemonitoring program, patients receive a call from a nurse trained to offer telemonitoring services. An information sheet, pulse oximeter, and log for recording their oximeter readings, body temperature and symptoms are delivered to their home within a day.


Each patient receives a daily call from a telemonitoring nurse. Patients are asked to share their symptoms and measurements. The nurse enters the information into their medical record and alerts the patient’s physician if there are immediate concerns. Patients can also call a telemonitoring phone number or their provider with questions or concerns. Most patients are monitored for about 14 to 21 days.


Secure Chat instant messaging also allows hospitalists to connect directly with primary care providers to discuss patient care and transitions. Physicians, nurses, case managers, bed planners, unit coordinators and others are able to chat, email or call instantly while keeping information secure.


Before COVID-19, telemonitoring was exclusively provided by a team of ProHealth telemonitoring professionals. In spring 2020 when COVID-19 cases suddenly increased, nurses and other professionals from across the system stepped up to take telemonitoring shifts.


Physicians and nursing professionals received workflows, Epic instructions and telemonitoring information.ProHealth’s performance analytics professionals helped enhance staff scheduling processes and delivery of the patient packets, and Continuum of Care leaders trained the additional nurses.


Telemonitoring with oxygen


Supplemental oxygen services were added to the telemonitoring program in December 2020, for patients treated and discharged from a ProHealth hospital or emergency department. A team of professionals responsible for inpatient, emergency department and outpatient COVID-19 care collaborated with ProHealth’s Performance Excellence project engineers quickly to develop telemonitoring with oxygen care management and patient transition workflows, ensure oxygen equipment availability, and communicate details about the program to ProHealth clinicians and the vendor.


Eligible patients must meet all the criteria for the telemonitoring program and for supplemental oxygen. Respiratory therapists evaluate patients for the use and level of home oxygen.


Telemonitoring is considered for patients in the community or discharging to the community who have had a respiratory-related diagnosis, suspected case of COVID-19, or are recovering from COVID-19


Once home oxygen is ordered by a physician, a respiratory therapist provides oxygen equipment and education to the patient before discharge. A clinical representative from the oxygen vendor can also provide equipment and education during off hours, making the service available 24/7.


Patients also receive instructions for oxygen use, a concentrator or oxygen tank and cart on loan, an oxygen mask, tubing, and a blood pressure cuff. They are scheduled for follow-upvisits with their primary care provider.


The most recent surge in COVID-19 patients led to more patients hospitalized for COVID-19, with more severe illness. Many needed inpatient care for longer periods and required higher levels of oxygen.As they neared discharge, ProHealth teams aligned inpatient and outpatient oxygen-level protocols so more patients could be safely discharged for telemonitoring with oxygen.


Since its inception, the telemonitoring program has been an important resource for patients, providers and staff.In addition to enhancing patient safety, the services have helped ease inpatient capacity constraints during patient surges.


“Thanks to the team, the program started strong and has become even more significant over time,” said Julie Jackson, ProHealth’s vice president for Continuum of Care. “Their ability to be nimble and respond to the ever-changing needs of our patients has made a major difference for these patients and our system.”


The articles from these contributors are based on their personal expertise and viewpoints, and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of their employers or affiliated organizations.

Weekly Brief

loading

The Leadership Perspectives forum brings together voices shaping the healthcare ecosystem. Participation is by invitation only. It features leaders who are not merely observing changes in care delivery, but actively contributing to them through clinical, operational, and patient-focused insights.

> <
  • Healthcare Concierge 2026

    Current Issue
  • Therapy Services 2026

    Current Issue
EDITOR'S CHOICE
  • DSI's 29th Biannual DoD/VA & Government Health IT Summit
  • Driscoll Children’s Hospital Dr. Dino Scanio, DHA, MPH, Multiservice Hospital Director of Clinics The Shifting Sands of Healthcare: Why Hospitals Must Prioritize Ambulatory Care
  • Jefferson Health Oren Guttman, Enterprise Vice President for Patient Safety & High Reliability Patient Safety in our Post Covid Word-Resilient, not just Reliable Systems
  • Royale Hayat Hospital Dennis Joseph, MSW, M Phil, CPHQ, CPPS Director of Quality Harmonizing Patient Safety and Technological Innovation in Healthcare
  • McLaren Health Care Alison Havens, Director Patient Care Services Innovation, Technology, and the Patient Care Experience
Copyright © 2026 Healthcare Business Review. All rights reserved. |  Subscribe |  Sitemap |  About us |  Newsletter |  Feedback Policy |  Editorial Policy follow on linkedin
CLOSE

Specials

I agree We use cookies on this website to enhance your user experience. By clicking any link on this page you are giving your consent for us to set cookies. More info

This content is copyright protected

However, if you would like to share the information in this article, you may use the link below:

https://www.healthcarebusinessrevieweurope.com/leadership-perspective/wisconsin-system-finds-success-with-telemonitoring-for-covid19-patients-nwid-697.html