More support for surgery patients on virtual wards | News from St Bartholomew's

  1. Contrast:

More support for surgery patients on virtual wards

Remote monitoring in the NHS

Londoners waiting for heart surgery are to get more support thanks to a virtual ward created by a Barts Health consultant.

The number of people waiting for procedures has increased during the pandemic.

The technology allows NHS clinicians to monitor patients at home, give advice on how to prepare for surgery and spot those who may need to be treated sooner.

It’s the brainchild of consultant cardiologist Dr Debashish Das and has been rolled out to eight specialist heart centres in the capital, including at St Bartholomew’s Hospital.

Patients using the system will answer questionnaires and submit data such as blood pressure to a virtual ward monitored by hospital clinicians.

Those showing deterioration will be offered a consultation and may even have their surgery sooner.

During the pandemic, Dr Das and his team have also used remote monitoring to get patients home sooner after an operation.

They cut the time in hospital from 3-5 days to 1-2 days, freeing up capacity in hospital to treat other patients.

London is the first city in the UK to run a remote monitoring programme on this scale.

Dr Das said: “Remote monitoring is a game changer. It gives clinicians up to date patient data, often in real time, so we can make sure our patients are on the best course of treatment. For patients, it gives them an important role to play in their own care, and the comfort of knowing they are being assessed from afar.” 

The London Cardiac Remote Monitoring Programme has been commissioned on behalf of the South and North London Cardiac Operational Delivery Networks using technology from Ortus-iHealth.

Read more

Comments

Add a response »

No comments yet: why not be the first to contribute?

Cookies help us deliver the best experience for you on our website. Some of them are essential, and others are there to help make it easier and more secure for you to use our site. We also use analytics cookies to help us understand how people use our website so we can make it better. If you choose not to accept these cookies, our site will still work correctly but some third party services (such as videos or social media feeds) may not display.

Please choose a setting: