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How to Choose a Remote Patient Monitoring Company: A Provider's Guide

Last updated: June 16, 2026

Key Takeaways

  • Knowing how to choose a remote patient monitoring company starts with one question: will the vendor actually run the clinical work, or are they handing you software and walking away?
  • The market splits into software-only, full-service, and hybrid models. None is automatically right. The fit depends on your staffing, patient population, and how much of the program you want to own.
  • Evaluate clinical monitoring first, then patient engagement, devices, EHR integration, and the software platform, and only then the billing and contracting terms.
  • The biggest red flags are long upfront device commitments, EHR integrations that only drop a PDF into the chart, and vendors that leave your team to triage every abnormal reading alone.

If you are learning how to choose a remote patient monitoring company, you have probably noticed the same thing every provider does: nearly every vendor sounds excellent on a sales call. The hard part is separating the partners that genuinely run a remote care program from the ones that ship a device and a login and leave the rest to your staff. This guide walks through the questions that actually matter, the answers a strong partner should give, and the warning signs worth slowing down for, so you can evaluate any remote patient monitoring vendor with confidence.

Why Choosing the Right Remote Patient Monitoring Company Matters

Since January 1, 2020, CMS has allowed practices to deliver Remote Patient Monitoring and Chronic Care Management under general supervision of clinical staff. In practice, that means a physician or clinic can partner with a third-party vendor to help run the program at scale while the practice remains the entity that bills Medicare. That single rule is why vendor selection is so consequential. The company you choose effectively becomes an extension of your clinical team, your device logistics, your documentation, and your audit trail. Choose well and a remote care program can run quietly in the background. Choose poorly and it can create more work than it removes.

Remote care is also no longer a single offering. A mature partner can support a connected set of programs, including Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM), Chronic Care Management (CCM), Behavioral Health Integration (BHI), and Principal Care Management (PCM). Knowing which programs a vendor can actually deliver, and whether they can grow with you, is part of the selection process.

Full-Service vs. Software-Only: The First Decision

Before comparing features, decide what kind of partner you need. Remote patient monitoring companies generally fall into three categories, and the right model depends entirely on your internal capacity.

Model What the vendor provides Best fit when
Software-only A platform and devices. Your team handles enrollment, monitoring, outreach, and documentation. You have spare clinical capacity and want to keep monitoring fully in-house.
Full-service Platform, devices, logistics, and a clinical team that monitors readings, contacts patients, and documents the work. Your staff is already stretched and you want the program run for you without adding headcount.
Hybrid A shared model where some monitoring stays in-house and some is handled by the vendor. You want to start outsourced and bring more in-house over time, or vice versa.

Match the model to your goals rather than to a vendor's pitch. With that decision made, the following criteria let you compare partners on what they actually do. If you would rather talk it through against your specific patient panel, you can schedule a demo and walk the criteria together.

1. Clinical Monitoring Support

Ask: Does the vendor provide clinical monitoring, or is your clinic expected to watch every reading around the clock? This is the criterion that most affects patient care, so evaluate it first.

A full-service partner should offer a clinical team that reviews incoming vital sign data and reaches out to patients when a reading crosses a defined threshold. Nsight Health, for example, provides a U.S.-based, English and Spanish speaking clinical team employed by Nsight, made up of nurses and medical assistants, who monitor patient readings and contact patients on a recorded line when data exceeds a critical threshold. A nurse can make a clinical assessment and escalate to the ordering physician when needed, which filters out a great deal of the noise that would otherwise land on your staff.

You should also ask whether thresholds can be customized at both the practice level and the individual patient level, because no two patient panels are alike.

Watch out: Many vendors offer no clinical monitoring at all, which leaves your clinic responsible for responding to every abnormal reading, including overnight.

2. Patient Engagement and Adherence

Ask: Who onboards and trains patients, and how does the vendor keep them engaged month after month? A program only works if patients keep using their devices, so adherence is a clinical issue before it is a financial one.

Look for a partner that ships devices with tracking, then calls each patient once the device arrives to walk them through their first measurement and confirm data is flowing correctly. Beyond onboarding, ask to see the vendor's ongoing adherence program. If patients drift away after the first month or two, the program will not deliver value to them or to your practice.

Watch out: Some vendors push patient training onto clinic staff, adding work you were trying to offload in the first place.

3. Devices and Consumables

Ask: Who pays for the first device, who covers consumables, and how are devices stored and shipped?

A patient-friendly partner supplies the first device for each patient at no cost to the practice or the patient, and most patients need only one. Just as important, ask about consumables such as batteries, lancets, and test strips. Covering and replenishing those is a quiet but meaningful part of keeping patients adherent. The vendor should also manage all storage, fulfillment, shipping, and returns, so your office never becomes a warehouse.

On device type, ask whether you are locked into Bluetooth. Bluetooth devices are inexpensive, but pairing, smartphone requirements, Wi-Fi, and password issues can frustrate patients and lower long-term adherence. Cellular-enabled devices that transmit data automatically, with no patient setup, tend to be more reliable for older or less tech-comfortable patients.

Watch out: Some vendors require a one-year-plus commitment and an upfront order of 100 or even 500 devices, and some expect your office to store and distribute them.

4. EHR Integration

Ask: Do you integrate with my EHR, what does the integration actually do, and what does it cost?

This is where vendor claims and vendor reality often diverge. A real integration writes patient readings into the EHR as structured vital sign data that can be queried and reported on, lets you order remote care directly from the chart, and supports the reporting many quality programs require. Strong partners integrate with a wide range of practice-based EHR systems. Nsight integrates with more than 50 of the top practice-based EHRs and continues to add more.

Watch out: Many vendors either do not integrate at all, charge several thousand dollars for an integration, or simply drop a PDF or fax into the chart. A PDF the EHR cannot read is not a true integration, and it blocks the reporting you may need.

5. Software Platform and Audit Trail

Ask: Is there a single platform where my team can see every patient's data, and does it create an audit trail that holds up under a Medicare audit?

Because remote care relies on time-based codes, the platform should track time automatically rather than asking your staff to log it by hand. Nsight's HIPAA-compliant, SOC 2-certified platform, Evelyn, lets providers and their clinical teams log in to view patient data, monitor compliance, add clinical notes, and review documentation in one place. Time spent reviewing data and interacting with patients is captured automatically, and calls placed through the platform are time stamped and recorded as part of the medical record.

That automatic, time-stamped record is exactly what you want if a payer or regulator ever reviews the program. Ask any vendor to show you what their audit record looks like before you sign.

Watch out: Many vendors require manual time tracking or offer a thin, manually produced audit trail, both of which add work and introduce risk.

6. Billing Support

Ask: Do you help me generate claims every month, and how?

Remote care billing is detail-heavy, and a good partner removes that burden rather than adding to it. Look for a vendor that delivers a monthly billing file showing the applicable codes, the correct date of service, and the number of units for each code, so your team can submit accurate claims. With some EHRs, a partner may be able to generate those claims automatically at no extra cost. Because different remote care codes follow different timing rules, having the partner reconcile dates of service for you removes a common source of error.

Watch out: Many vendors offer little or no billing support, or provide it in a form that does not connect to your EHR.

7. Contracting Terms

Ask: What long-term commitment am I agreeing to, and what am I obligated to purchase up front?

Contracting terms are where a program's economics are quietly set. The most provider-friendly arrangements avoid forcing a large upfront device purchase or a multi-year lock-in before you have seen results. Read the commitment terms closely, and be cautious about any structure that ties you in heavily before the program has proven itself in your practice.

Watch out: Arrangements that advertise unusually high revenue splits sometimes come paired with enrollment expectations the vendor cannot actually meet.

8. Compliance and Data Security

Ask: How do you protect patient data, and how do you help me stay audit-ready?

Remote care moves sensitive patient data continuously, so a partner should demonstrate compliance with HIPAA and HITECH and maintain a proactive compliance program rather than reacting after a problem appears. Ask how they prepare practices for routine payer or regulatory audits, and confirm they will sign a Business Associate Agreement. A partner that treats compliance as part of the service, not an afterthought, protects both your patients and your practice.

A Vendor Evaluation Checklist

Use this checklist to compare any remote patient monitoring companies side by side. Strong answers to these questions separate genuine partners from well-marketed software.

Area Question to ask What a strong answer looks like
Clinical monitoring Do you monitor readings, or do we? A dedicated clinical team monitors data and escalates only what matters.
Patient onboarding Who trains and engages patients? The vendor onboards patients and runs an ongoing adherence program.
Devices Who pays, and is it cellular or Bluetooth? First device and consumables covered, with reliable cellular options.
EHR integration Is it structured data or just a PDF? Readings flow into the chart as queryable, reportable vital signs.
Platform and audit How is time tracked and documented? Automatic time tracking and a time-stamped audit trail.
Billing Do you help generate monthly claims? A monthly billing file with codes, dates of service, and units.
Contracting What is the commitment and upfront cost? No heavy upfront device order or long lock-in before results.

How Nsight Health Approaches Remote Care

Nsight Health is a full-service, clinically managed remote care partner. Rather than handing practices software and stepping back, Nsight provides the technology, the devices and logistics, and a U.S.-based clinical team employed by Nsight that helps run the program day to day. Across the country, Nsight supports more than 130,000 patients with over 1,700 providers and 480 clinics, and has monitored more than 40 million vitals.

Nsight delivers four connected programs under one roof: Remote Patient Monitoring, Chronic Care Management, Behavioral Health Integration, and Principal Care Management. Working with a single partner across those programs simplifies oversight, avoids juggling multiple vendors, and supports continuity for patients as their needs change. If you want to see how the model would fit your practice, you can schedule a demo.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: How do I choose a remote patient monitoring company?
A: Start by deciding whether you need a software-only, full-service, or hybrid partner based on your clinical capacity. Then compare vendors on clinical monitoring, patient engagement, devices, EHR integration, the software platform and audit trail, billing support, and contracting terms.

Q: What is the difference between a full-service and a software-only RPM vendor?
A: A software-only vendor provides the platform and devices and leaves monitoring, outreach, and documentation to your team. A full-service vendor adds a clinical team and logistics so the program is largely run for you. Hybrid models sit in between.

Q: Should patients use Bluetooth or cellular devices?
A: Both can work, but cellular-enabled devices transmit data automatically with no pairing, apps, or Wi-Fi setup, which tends to improve adherence among older or less tech-comfortable patients. Bluetooth is less expensive but can create connectivity friction.

Q: What does a real EHR integration actually do?
A: A true integration writes readings into the chart as structured vital sign data you can query and report on, and often lets you order remote care from within the EHR. Dropping a PDF or fax into the chart is not a true integration because the data cannot be read or reported on automatically.

Q: Why does the audit trail matter when choosing a vendor?
A: Remote care relies on time-based documentation. A platform that automatically time stamps monitoring, notes, and patient calls creates a defensible record if a payer or regulator reviews the program, while a manual trail adds work and risk.

Q: Can one vendor support RPM, CCM, BHI, and PCM together?
A: Yes. A mature partner can deliver these programs together, which simplifies oversight and supports continuity of care. Confirm which programs a vendor actually delivers today rather than assuming a broad menu.

Q: What contract red flags should I watch for?
A: Be cautious of large upfront device purchases, multi-year lock-ins before you have seen results, and revenue-split promises that depend on enrollment numbers the vendor may not be able to deliver.

Q: Does the practice or the vendor bill Medicare?
A: Under CMS general supervision rules, the practice remains the billing entity. A vendor partner helps run the program and prepares the documentation and billing file, but your practice submits the claims.

See how a full-service remote care partner would work for your practice. Schedule a demo.


Works Cited

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. "Telehealth." CMS.gov, U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, www.cms.gov/medicare/coverage/telehealth.
American Medical Association. "Remote Patient Monitoring Implementation Playbook." AMA, American Medical Association, www.ama-assn.org/practice-management/digital/remote-patient-monitoring-implementation-playbook-overview.
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. "Physician Fee Schedule." CMS.gov, U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, www.cms.gov/medicare/payment/fee-schedules/physician.

Disclaimer: This article is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, billing, clinical, or financial advice. Coverage rules, supervision requirements, and reimbursement policies change and vary by Medicare Administrative Contractor (MAC) and payer. Providers are responsible for verifying current requirements and confirming the accuracy of any claims they submit. CPT is a registered trademark of the American Medical Association. Individual practice results vary.