Clinical intelligence,
in the home.
Contactless monitoring inside the resident's own home, with timely clinical intelligence delivered to the home health agency or care team.
Quiet clinical intelligence. Settled into every kind of senior home.
What it looks like in a resident's home
A sensor on the wall. Continuous monitoring between agency visits. A timely read for the care team.
In the home
A wall-mounted radar sensor
Installed in the room where the resident spends the most time. About the size of a smoke detector. Reads heart rate, respiratory rate, and movement continuously. Nothing the resident has to interact with.
Between visits
A continuous clinical read
Home health visits are episodic. The hours between them are where slow decline used to go unseen. The sensor and our clinical team fill that gap so the agency clinician arrives informed at the next visit.
For the care team
A timely intelligence report
Sent to the home health agency, ordering physician, or care coordinator on the cadence that matches the resident's care plan. Used to triage visits, adjust frequency, and surface the resident whose trajectory looks off.
Who this is for
Three places this fits.
Home Health Agencies
Agencies whose visit-based model leaves long gaps between clinical reads. SwitzerHealth turns those gaps into continuous monitoring with a timely clinical interpretation, so visits are better targeted and intra-episode deterioration is less likely to be missed.
ACOs & Risk-Bearing Entities
Risk-bearing organizations managing populations of seniors at home, where the cost of an unnecessary ED visit or readmission lands directly on the entity. Continuous in-home monitoring with clinical interpretation pulls the signal forward.
Families & Care Coordinators
For adult children coordinating care for a parent who wants to stay home, and for the care coordinators those families work with. A clinical layer that is present without being intrusive, with a documented timely read.
Why home health agencies choose us
The hours between visits, watched.
Home health visits are episodic by design. A nurse comes Tuesday and Friday. The signs of trouble rarely respect that schedule. SwitzerHealth fills the gap with a continuous clinical read, summarized on a timely cadence for the care team.
Built on the same FDA 510(k) cleared sensor platform and the same clinical team that runs across the rest of senior care. Aging in place is the resident's preferred home; we treat it as one of the categories the model serves, not an afterthought.
Talk to us →What changes for residents and families
Residents keep living where they want to live. No wristband, no app to set up on a phone they may not use, no camera. The sensor sits on the wall in their living room or bedroom and stays out of the way.
Families get a real answer when they wonder how mom or dad is actually doing between visits: a clinical team watches, and a timely report says what is changing.
How coverage works at home
Covered by Medicare for qualifying patients.
For qualifying patients living at home, SwitzerHealth's clinical services are covered by Medicare under the remote monitoring and care management code families. Coverage depends on valid physician orders, qualifying diagnoses, and individualized assessment.
Not all patients qualify. Care management codes are mutually exclusive within a single patient, month, and program. Coverage and code applicability vary by payer mix and clinical context.
How the relationship sits. A bona fide physician-patient relationship is established and documented by Switzer Medical PC, a physician-owned clinical entity, as part of intake. The agency or care team receives the timely clinical intelligence; the underlying clinical relationship lives with the PC.
FAQ
Common questions about home health
Who is this for?
Home health agencies, ACOs and risk-bearing entities, and families coordinating care for a parent aging in place. The clinical model is the same one we deliver inside senior care communities, brought into the resident's own home between agency visits.
How is it covered for a resident at home?
For qualifying patients living at home, the service is covered by Medicare under remote monitoring and care management code families. Coverage depends on valid physician orders, qualifying diagnoses, and individualized assessment.
What does the agency or care team receive?
A timely clinical intelligence report for each resident under the program, calibrated to the agency's visit cadence and the resident's care plan. Continuous monitoring runs between visits so the agency clinician arrives informed.
What does the resident have to do?
Almost nothing. The sensor is installed once and lives on the wall. No wristband, no app, no daily routine for the resident to remember.
Is there a camera or microphone?
No. The radar sensor reads physiological signals without imaging or audio. No video, no recording of any image.
Who reviews the data?
A licensed clinical team at Switzer Medical PC, a physician-owned clinical entity. They produce the timely clinical intelligence report.
Contact
Talk to us about your home health program
Agency, ACO, or family-facing care coordinator. Tell us what you operate and we will show you what the first 30 days would look like.
This form is for general information requests only. Submitting it does not establish any clinical, contractual, or business relationship.
Reimbursement depends on valid physician orders, qualifying diagnoses, and individualized assessment. Not all patients qualify. Care management codes are mutually exclusive. Coverage varies by payer mix and clinical context.