Building a Telemedicine Program to Create a Sustainable Care Delivery Model for a Rural Hospital at Risk for Closure.
Introduction: Rural hospitals continue to close nationally. High fixed costs, low patient volume, and outmigration remain problematic for surviving rural hospitals. This article presents an innovative telemedicine partnership between a small, not-for-profit rural hospital and a tertiary care medical center in the southeast. The vision was to create a sustainable care delivery model where patients receive care at a rural hospital in their home community with the added benefit of clinical expertise from a tertiary care center.
Methods: A single-center descriptive case study involving a 32-bed not-for-profit rural community hospital and South Carolina's only comprehensive medical center. This article details the development and implementation of this innovative care delivery model. The strategy and logic model utilized to analyze the program is described.
Results: From fiscal year 2019 to 2022, Hampton Regional Medical Center saw an increased number of yearly admissions from 442 to 965. Associated, there was a 20% reduction in inpatient transfers to another facility and a 35% reduction in 30-day readmission, while seeing a more complex patient population as demonstrated by an increase in case-mix index. There was no increase in outmigration.
Conclusions: While rural hospitals continue to close nationally, we describe an innovative telemedicine partnership between a small, not-for-profit rural hospital and a tertiary care medical center to build a sustainable care delivery model that can support rural hospital survivability.