

To Drive Your Telehealth Strategy, Answer One Simple Question
It seems simple, but hospitals and health systems looking to expand their telehealth capabilities and services must first answer why telehealth is a solution for their organizations, patients and communities, said Kevin Curtis, M.D., medical director of , at a recent AHA Executive Forum on addressing disruption through innovation and value in Boston.
The worst answer? Too many answers. While telehealth can help organizations solve a variety of problems, including addressing gaps in care delivery, increasing capacity and access, increasing patient and/or provider convenience, addressing workforce shortages and improving reputation, failing to select the top one or two primary problems can derail telehealth implementation.
鈥淚f you say [you want to impact] everything, you鈥檒l have a hard time designing the telehealth program you want,鈥 said Curtis, who cited Harvard Business School鈥檚 Michael Porter鈥檚 oft-cited words,
Dartmouth-Hitchcock defined its top objective for telehealth squarely around access: to help deliver outstanding care to the region independent of patient location.
鈥淲hat did we decide not to do, all of which there was a need for and a potential benefit for?鈥 asked Curtis. 鈥淲e said, we鈥檙e not doing direct to consumer. We鈥檙e not doing remote patient monitoring.鈥
When the system opened its Center for Telehealth and Connected Care in 2012, its initial offering of telestroke and telespecialty e-consults to rural providers reflected the focus on increasing capacity and access. Today, the center offers seven provider-to-provider telehealth services.
For more on the current state of telehealth and how to inform your telehealth strategy, read the AHA Center for Health Innovation Market Insights report Telehealth: A Path to Virtual Care.