Cost-effective innovations to improve health and health care in patients with complex chronic diseases are urgently needed. Mobile health (mHealth) remote monitoring applications (apps) are a promising technology to meet this need. This article reports on a study evaluating patients’ use of a tablet device with an mHealth app and a cellular-enabled glucose meter that automatically uploaded blood glucose values to the app. Improvements were observed across all three components of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act’s “triple aim.” Self-rated wellness and numerous quality-of-care metrics improved, billed charges and paid claims decreased, but no changes in clinical endpoints were observed.
CITATION STYLE
Bovbjerg, M. L., Lee, J., Wolff, R., Bangs, B., & May, M. A. (2017). Pilot study for managing complex chronic care medicaid patients with diabetes using a mobile health application achieves “triple aim” improvement in a primary care setting. Clinical Diabetes, 35(4), 227–231. https://doi.org/10.2337/cd17-0006
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