Guide Helps Healthcare Facilities Embrace Telehealth

Document provides insights and best practices for telehealth, including carbon reduction, space utilization, equitable access and technology.

By HFT Staff


Telehealth or telemedicine has become an integral component of health systems.  

To help hospitals and other healthcare facilities embrace telehealth and help managers in these facilities adapt facilities to the practice, the U.S. Department of Energy’s Better Buildings Initiative recently released a document that provides insights and best practices for telehealth, including carbon reduction, space utilization, equitable access, and technology. 

During the COVID-19 pandemic, telehealth became the primary route of treatment for patients and doctors. The goals of telehealth are to make healthcare more accessible to patients who have limited mobility, time, or transportation options and those who live in rural or isolated communities. Telehealth aims to improve coordination and care between healthcare teams and their patients. While addressing accessibility, telehealth sets health systems on a path to meet their decarbonization and energy reduction goals.  

Regarding space utilization in healthcare facilities, for example, telehealth has allowed healthcare providers to reevaluate the way medical spaces are used. While healthcare staff have continued to commute to medical campuses to provide virtual care, patients can attend visits from their homes. In the wake of fewer patients on-site, health systems have become creative with their spaces to accommodate the increase in virtual visits. 

Telemedicine can take place throughout the healthcare system including primary and ambulatory care centers, cancer centers, emergency departments, patient rooms, and many other clinical and nonclinical spaces. Many healthcare providers have opted to integrate telemedicine tools directly into patient rooms, like monitors for conducting virtual visits. 

These monitors can be used for more than virtual visits, including for entertainment, education programs, food orders, and more. Another option for healthcare workers is mobile telehealth carts. Staff can easily transport carts between rooms that can also double as charting stations for nurses and clinicians. 



November 10, 2022


Topic Area: Information Technology


Recent Posts

How Efficiency Checklists Help Hospitals Save Energy, Water and Money

Keith Edgerton explains how a simple, systematic tool can help healthcare facilities identify savings, support sustainability goals and reinvest in long-term decarbonization.


Designing with Heart: Seen Health Center Blends Cultural Warmth and Clinical Care

Case study: The Alhambra-based facility uses Wilsonart Woodgrains to create a space where comfort, tradition and durability come together for an elevated senior care experience.


Rutgers Health and University Hospital Breaks Ground on Campus Expansion

The groundbreaking follows the long-awaited demolition of administrative offices built in the 1970s.


What to Consider When Modernizing Healthcare Facilities

While there has been a call to preserve old buildings, healthcare facilities need to weigh the options of patient care.


Corewell Health Beaumont Troy Hospital to Build New Tower

The tower is expected to be completed in 2030.


 
 


FREE Newsletter Signup Form

News & Updates | Webcast Alerts
Building Technologies | & More!

 
 
 


All fields are required. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

 
 
 
 

Healthcare Facilities Today membership includes free email newsletters from our facility-industry brands.

Facebook   Twitter   LinkedIn   Posts

Copyright © 2023 TradePress. All rights reserved.