A groundbreaking remote monitoring app for rheumatoid arthritis patients has halved the need for hospital consultations, offering a scalable model for chronic disease management that prioritizes patient convenience and clinical efficiency.
For the more than 400,000 people in the UK living with rheumatoid arthritis, regular trips to the hospital for blood tests and specialist reviews have been an unavoidable part of life. That burden is now being lifted by a digital health solution developed at Southmead Hospital in Bristol, which has fundamentally transformed care delivery by enabling remote monitoring that has cut in-person consultations by half since its 2018 launch.
The app, created by rheumatologist Dr. Phil Hammon, allows patients to report key symptoms from home, replacing most routine hospital visits with virtual check-ins. This shift is particularly impactful given that many rheumatoid arthritis patients are on expensive biologic drugs costing up to £20,000 annually, requiring diligent monitoring to ensure efficacy and safety.
Penny Parry, a 68-year-old patient from Dursley, embodies this transformation. She has used the app for the past three years and has needed to visit Southmead Hospital only once in that time. “From here to Southmead it’s a journey. If it can be done over the phone it’s easier for the clinicians and it’s easier for me and particularly at times when I have got a bad joint pain travel is uncomfortable,” she explains.
The app’s interface is straightforward: patients answer questions about joint pain and their mental coping mechanisms. The system then generates a score and produces a visual graph that specialists can analyze to make timely adjustments to medication dosages, all without requiring the patient to leave their home.
Dr. Hammon confirms the dramatic impact: “face-to-face consultations at the hospital have halved since it was introduced in 2018.” He adds, “That’s had a real impact in terms of convenience for patients so they don’t need to come into hospital, find parking, wait for appointments.” This reduction translates to thousands of avoided trips annually for the 1,500+ patients already enrolled.
Why This Model Matters Beyond Rheumatology
The success of Southmead’s app offers a replicable blueprint for managing other chronic conditions that require frequent monitoring. By replacing routine physical visits with structured remote data collection, healthcare systems can alleviate pressure on clinics while empowering patients to take an active role in their care. The app’s design—prioritizing simplicity and accessibility—ensures it remains usable for older populations who may be less comfortable with technology.
- Proactive Care: Specialists can monitor patients every six months, even when they feel well, catching subtle changes before they escalate.
- Efficiency Gains: Clinicians spend less time on administrative travel logistics and more on data-driven decision-making.
- Patient Empowerment: Individuals gain continuous insight into their condition through score trends and graphs.
- System-Wide Relief: Reduced footfall eases parking, waiting room congestion, and staffing demands.
The Path Forward for Digital Health
This initiative demonstrates that targeted digital tools can deliver measurable clinical and quality-of-life improvements without requiring complex infrastructure. For developers and health-tech innovators, the key takeaway is the power of solving a specific, well-defined problem—in this case, monitoring for patients on high-cost drugs—with a minimally viable product that integrates seamlessly into existing clinical workflows.
The app’s three-year track record provides evidence that remote monitoring is not a temporary pandemic-era fix but a sustainable care model. As healthcare systems globally seek ways to manage aging populations and rising chronic disease burdens, solutions like this one will become increasingly vital.
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