Wilma (name
has been changed) is a 64-year-old woman who suffers from severe Chronic
Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) and severe heart disease, which has
resulted in five heart attacks. She would often become septic with the
slightest infection. Wilma would become critically ill with little or no
warning, often being rushed to the hospital after her family would find her
completely unresponsive.
Following one
particularly bad infection, she spent four days in the hospital recovering
on IV antibiotics. She was finally discharged with a script for oral
anti-biotic and was receiving home health services from HomeCall of
Stillwater. Vicki Shirley, RN, acted quickly to put one of HomeCall's
HomMed telemonitors in her home to help keep a closer eye on Wilma's
condition. The telemonitor is used to measure a patient's vital signs and
send them on to the nurse within minutes.
Within a few days of
using the telemonitor, Vicki noticed that Wilma's oxygen levels were falling
and that she was becoming hypotensive. Vicki immediately called to check on
Wilma and discovered that the reason her vital signs had fallen so quickly
was because she was not taking the medication prescribed for her. Wilma
could not afford the costly pharmaceutical bill and had not informed Vicki
about the situation. Vicki went directly to the doctor's office and
gathered samples of the drugs for her. The doctor, concerned with Wilma's
status, recommended that she go back to the hospital and stay in intensive
care so she could be watched more closely. Wilma refused to go back to the
hospital and begged to stay at home. Vicki and the doctor decided that
since the HomMed telemonitor would allow Wilma to be monitored everyday,
several times per day, they could try to keep her at home and see if her
condition improved after she began her medication. This would allow Wilma
the comfort of being in her own home, and provide her the attention she
needed without having another stay in the hospital with a huge bill to deal
with later. She began her medication and both Vicki and Wilma's family
used the telemonitoring system to keep a close eye on Wilma's condition.
Wilma's family monitored here blood pressure and oxygen levels every 2-3
hours and reported the results to Vicki.
Within 48 hours of
beginning the antibiotic, the monitor showed that Wilma's blood pressure and
oxygen levels were improving. By Monday, Wilma's vital signs were back to
normal and Vicki went to see the doctor to discuss Wilma's status. After
reviewing reports compiled by the telemonitor, the doctor was very impressed
to see the turn around in her status. The monitor was crucial to discovering
that Wilma was septic because other than her decreasing oxygen and blood
pressure levels, there were no other symptoms that Vicki could have picked
up on such as fever, chilling, or unconsciousness--which are common. The
monitor had successfully enabled Vicki to see the initial downturn in
Wilma's status and to take immediate action to correct it without another
costly hospital stay.