VectorCare's no-code SaaS platform and mobile app enable remote care teams to collaborate and execute healthcare events in real-time.
FREMONT, CA:VectorCare, a Bay Area patient care logistics company, expands its technology tools to power mobile home-based health services.
At the beginning of 2020, the healthcare industry witnessed a slow shift toward home-based care delivery transform into an urgent need. Yet, the majority of healthcare providers are still using old school technologies to manage and deliver home healthcare services, making it extremely difficult to coordinate and track remote care events.
VectorCare's no-code SaaS platform and mobile app enable remote care teams to collaborate and execute healthcare events in real-time. Administrators, IT teams, and care teams can build and deploy dynamic workflows for any service, track and record the status and critical information of all visits in real-time, use remote monitoring, and generate configurable reports to assess and optimize care outcomes.
The Delivery app enables care teams and service providers to follow predefined workflows, gather relevant data, send status updates, schedule other services, and check all information concerning their assigned home visits directly from their smartphone.
"Legacy technology today can't keep up and healthcare providers are being forced to adopt new innovative and agile solutions that empower remote care teams and accelerate incredible patient care. We're excited to continue driving this healthcare-at-home movement through our platform and care delivery apps," said David Emanuel, CEO.
At the onset of the pandemic, VectorCare was able to help one of its partners and client, a major healthcare payer in the Pacific Northwest, launch a mobile health program that helped provide at-home COVID-19 testing and post-surgery care for high-risk patients. Through mobilizing an existing network of local ambulance services, the payer used VectorCare to scale home-based operations without recruiting additional staff.
Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, the Hospital at Home model of care, pioneered by Johns Hopkins Schools of Medicine and Public Health, was gaining traction. Hospital at home patient care episodes boast cost savings of 19-30 percent and better clinical outcomes than conventional models, while allowing patients to receive care in the comfort of their own home.