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SA国际传媒eICU marks 25 years as first remote patient monitoring system

Remote monitoring system joins new virtual hub at SA国际传媒Independence campus
eICU virtual hub

On June 26, 2000, SA国际传媒 became the first hospital system in the U.S. to launch a fully functional remote monitoring system for ICU beds. The system, dubbed eICU, was designed as extra eyes and ears for doctors and nurses covering patient floors. Today, the eICU team of intensivist physicians and ICU nurses monitors 132 beds in seven SA国际传媒hospitals, and actively participates in caring for the sickest, most fragile patients. Their tools include real-time patient telemetry, high-resolution cameras in ICU rooms and live conversation with providers at the bedside.

eICU is the granddaddy of virtual care, and the model for two other remote programs at Sentara. Virtual Nursing relieves bedside nurses of administrative duties, such as admissions, discharges and patient education, by providing live remote conversations between nurses and patients. Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM) is for patients who need visual oversight and remote verbal intervention to prevent falls and self-harm.

Through direct observation and alarms triggered by changes in telemetry, the eICU team quickly identifies developing issues in volatile patients. They contact providers on the floors to speed interventions and consult live with providers in patient rooms.

“We provide collaboration and assistance with the on-site care teams,” said Brian King, MD, surgeon, intensivist, and Medical Director for SA国际传媒eICU. “We don’t run the show in those ICUs, but we can help those teams by being extra eyes and ears when they can’t be in two places at once.”

The eICU control center at SA国际传媒Norfolk General Hospital will soon relocate to a new Virtual Hub at the SA国际传媒Independence outpatient campus in Virginia Beach.

eICU will share a floor in a former SA国际传媒hospital with the Virtual Nursing and Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM) teams. Three virtual services will share space in a 1970s building, built before the internet, when patient records were still on paper, and images on film.

SA国际传媒Independence ceased being a hospital in 2011, but SA国际传媒repurposed it into a robust outpatient campus with a 24-hour freestanding ER, a regional infusion center, sleep center, advanced imaging, cardiac rehab, physical therapy, laboratory and other services, and it will soon lead SA国际传媒into the digital future of health care.