Targeting Telehealth as a Chronic Care Management Tool

By Eric Wicklund

Three healthcare organizations exploring the use of telehealth in care management are getting grants from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI).

The non-profit, which focuses on clinical effectiveness research (CER), announced more than $27 million in grant awards for three projects comparing care delivery via telehealth against traditional care methods.

“At the center of comparative clinical effectiveness research is a recognition that patients’ needs are diverse and not all treatments or interventions have the same effects for everyone,” Harv Feldman, MD, MSCE, PCORI’s deputy executive director for patient-centered research programs, said in a press release. “These CER studies will generate evidence about how different approaches to care may work better for some patients for health concerns facing different people every day.”

The three projects are:

Tapan Mehta, PhD, of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, is receiving almost $11.5 million to study how two different telehealth programs—remote patient monitoring (RPM) and digital health coaching—might help with care management for people living with type 2 diabetes who have multiple chronic conditions and physical disabilities. The study will examine each approach individually as well as together.

Richard Skolansky, DSC, and Kevin McLaughlin, PT, DPT, of Johns Hopkins University, are receiving almost $9.6 million to study the effectiveness of a telerehabilitation program for people living with chronic low back pain against in-clinic treatment.

The grant awards are part of a larger group of 10 awards totaling $165 million for CER research projects. Since 2010, the organizations has awarded more than $4.5 billion in grants for CER research.

Eric Wicklund is the associate content manager and senior editor for Innovation at HealthLeaders.