Virtual Nursing’s Future? One Platform, Many Uses

By Eric Wicklund

While virtual nursing programs typically begin with one or a few specific functions and outcomes, scaling those programs means creating a comprehensive platform that can handle many services.

Houston Methodist, which launched its virtual nursing program in 2022, is now using the platform to facilitate more than 500 admits and discharges a day across eight acute care campuses, says Steve Klahn, the health system’s clinical director for virtual medicine. And at its newest location, Houston Methodist Cypress, that experience is much more immersive.

“The team is piloting care delivery in a more comprehensive fashion with remote virtual nurses,” Klahn, a participant in the HealthLeaders Virtual Nursing Mastermind program for the second year, said in a recent e-mail exchange. “This pilot includes rotating bedside nurses through a local virtual operations center and supporting bedside nurses’ care for their patients by increased remote documentation assistance, multi-disciplinary rounds participation and virtual consenting.”

As noted in a 2024 story on the program, Houston Methodist is in it for the long run. That means understanding where the platform can evolve and where executives need to take a step back and evaluate their priorities.

“Maintaining flexibility to all the great ideas [that] come in, while being able to remain standardized in the approach so as to not have to re-educate and change workflows too frequently,” is crucial to the program’s growth, Klahn says. “We also aim to ensure programmatic efficiency with minimization of wait times, while maintaining 24×7 services with safe and fiscally responsible staffing solutions.”

One glimpse of the future might be seen in their staffing strategy. Several participants in the Mastermind program have indicated they’re looking at enabling nurses to work from home—a key incentive to retaining current nurses and attracting new ones. At Houston Methodist, which now has 50 RN FTEs dedicated to the program, Klahn says the idea is being pushed along out of necessity. Some 70% of the health system’s virtual nurses now work from home, and the goal is to get that number up to 90%.

“We are currently shifting more of our teams to remote work, as space in our virtual operations center is at a premium,” he says. “Our strategy remains for direct hire exceptional staff nurses (no-outsourcing to contracted teams), as well as supporting nurses in times of short-term light-duty assignments.”

Klahn says the program is gradually integrating new services as well, including dual medication signoffs, remote witnessing of controlled substance wasting, and VTE prevention rounding.

He says the program’s success is due to how well it has been received by both patients and nurses.

“The biggest surprise to me is how fast the program grew with the strategy our organization acted upon,” Klahn adds. “It was amazing to see how quickly the bedside teams embraced this new approach to patient care, and we were able to quickly deliver on the requests for services to each of our hospitals. The future is very bright for VN programs and we look forward to much more growth in the space.”

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