Nuvance Health is partnering with a digital health company to monitor and manage care for patients at home who are dealing with cognitive issues, including dementia. The platform also allows providers to spot early signs of decline.
Many people use brain-stimulating activities, like crossword puzzles or quizzes, to get up to speed in the morning or stay alert during the day. Healthcare providers are now finding that these activities, delivered through a mobile device, can help them monitor and even treat patients at home.
At Nuvance Health, clinicians are integrating Neuroglee Connect into care management for patients at neurology and primary care practices across New York and Connecticut. The digital health interventions are designed for patients with mild cognitive impairment and early-stage dementia.
“I'd like them to take ownership of their healthcare,” says Paul Wright, SVP and system chair of the Neuroscience Institute at Nuvance Health and the John and Joanne Patrick Endowed Chair for Advanced Technology in Neuroscience. “This begins their adoption of [the concept of] ‘This is your body, this is your mind, this is your health, and … being healthy is an active process.’ So I'd like them to be engaged and active.”
Digital health tools are gaining momentum with healthcare organizations thanks to the prevalence of mobile health devices in the home. Paired with remote patient monitoring programs, they offer care providers an easy portal to the patient beyond the regularly scheduled six-month checkups in the doctor’s office. Clinicians can draw patient data from these platforms to monitor health outcomes like medication adherence and effectiveness and moods.
With Neuroglee Connect, Wright is looking for a connection to his patients.
“I want to see that there is engagement,” he says. “That's because if you're not, if you're doing this and you're not engaged, then it's not meaningful.”
Through that engagement, which can include games, education, memory compensation, reminiscence and health and wellness activities, Wright says he can monitor patients’ cognitive abilities, even spotting declines or other concerning trends before either the patients or their caregivers notice any differences.
“We have the capabilities now to predict people who are not going to be doing well,” Wright says.
The platform also includes resources and education for caregivers, including support for managing anxiety and stress. Wright says these platforms not only allow the care team to include friends and family—who often see things before doctors or nurses do—but also give them the support they need.
Describing this technology as a platform isn’t unintentional. Digital health tools are part of a much larger care pathway, and the ability to have patients and caregivers access them at the time and place of their choosing (most often the home) gives providers a platform to manage and coordinate care that goes well beyond one app.
Forward-thinking healthcare leaders are using these platforms to develop remote patient monitoring programs that can track a wide variety of patient data in the home, which in turn can impact care management plans. Based on that data, clinicians can adjust, prescribe or discontinue prescribed medications, add educational or wellness resources, even schedule in-person checkups or specialist consults.
Wright says Neuroglee Connect also allows Nuvance to give its primary care providers more opportunities to care for patients they would otherwise send to specialists, like neurologists. Those specialists are in short supply and high demand, he notes, so the more opportunities to have PCPs handle some of the care, the better.
“We're able to, by going through primary care, deliver care to more people normally who would never have accessed it,” he adds.
Eric Wicklund is the associate content manager and senior editor for Innovation at HealthLeaders.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
Nuvance Health is using a digital health platform designed by Neuroglee to remotely monitor patients in its primary care practices who have cognitive health concerns, including dementia.
The app, accessible on a mobile device, enables patients to access brain-stimulating activities, like games and memory prompts, and provides access to health and wellness resources for both them and their caregivers.
Health systems and hospitals are using these platforms to create remote patient monitoring programs for a wide variety of patients, improving care management and coordination in between the doctor’s visits and cutting down on health emergencies and hospitalizations.