When Did Virtual Nursing Really Begin?
Psychiatric mental health care professionals used telemedicine in the ’60s to interact with each other, according to “Telehealth Nursing: Tools and Strategies for Optimal Patient Care.” But uses specifically for patient care weren’t established until later in the decade.
“The first documented use of telemedicine to provide direct patient care occurred in 1967 at Boston’s Logan International Airport,” Dawna Martich, MSN, RN, wrote in “Telehealth Nursing.” “A medical station was created, linking the airport with Massachusetts General Hospital, in order to provide care 24 hours a day.”
But an official definition of telenursing wasn’t established until 1997 when the American Nurses Association took the lead and also created professional guidelines.
“However, content to address the provision of patient care through this approach does not exist,” Martich wrote.
Early iterations of the Virtual Integrated Care (VIC) Team Model had a virtual APRN with “six core roles: patient education, staff mentoring, patient safety surveillance, physician rounding, admissions, and discharge,” according to an August 2023 report from the Patient Safety Network.
“In the initial VIC model, patient rooms in medical-surgical units at two different community hospitals were equipped with a wall-mounted camera, speakers, a large-screen video monitor, and tablet computers for bedside use,” the PSN report stated. “The virtual nurse and patient interacted through this technology.”
Virtual Nursing Trends Resulted from COVID-19 Era
One of the biggest questions surrounding virtual care, according to a HealthCare Dive trend report, is whether or not “Washington will make COVID-19-era telehealth flexibilities permanent.” The move, the report stated, has bipartisan support and federal regulators are allowing providers to prescribe some medications virtually.
Telehealth policies associated with Medicare that were instituted at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic remain in place through the end of 2024.
Permanent Medicare changes, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, include:
- Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) and Rural Health Clinics (RHCs) can serve as a distant site provider for behavioral/mental telehealth services.
- Medicare patients can receive telehealth services for behavioral/mental health care in their home.
- There are no geographic restrictions for originating site for behavioral/mental telehealth services.
- Behavioral/mental telehealth services can be delivered using audio-only communication platforms.
- Rural Emergency Hospitals (REHs) are eligible originating sites for telehealth.
Virtual Care to Address Nursing Shortage?
Virtual nursing was at the forefront of the American Organization for Nursing Leadership conference last month in New Orleans. Two chief nurse executives estimated that a “fully integrated” care model that includes a virtual nurse and a robot would save more than $2 million annually.
Bre Loughlin, a Wisconsin nurse, created Nurse Disrupted in 2020, providing virtual screenings to people in area shelters, according to a Spectrum News 1 report, but has expanded. She gives nurses the opportunity to work shorter shifts and complete work that doesn’t require them to interact with patients in person. More than 400 nurses are using Nurse Disrupted.
Meanwhile, some hospitals are making the shift to virtual nursing directly, rather than working with an outside company. Last September, Trinity Health established its TogetherTeam Virtual Connected Care program, which “uses technology to support direct care staff and increase patient interaction,” according to a news release.
OSF HealthCare in Peoria, Illinois, also announced a virtual nursing pilot program in October. Nurses in that program, OSF OnCall, typically handle admissions and discharges.
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