Remote cardiac monitoring available on NFZ in Lublin
Two hospitals in Lublin Voivodeship now offer remote cardiac monitoring for patients with pacemakers, funded by the National Health Fund (NFZ), enabling quicker intervention and fewer hospital visits.
NFZ-funded remote cardiac monitoring has been introduced in two hospitals in Lublin Voivodeship, giving patients with implanted pacemakers or other cardiac electronic devices access to telemetry-based surveillance. The system allows clinicians to receive device data and clinical alerts remotely, enabling faster intervention if a patient’s condition deteriorates.
How the service works
Remote cardiac monitoring, often called telemetry monitoring, uses implanted devices (pacemakers, implantable cardioverter-defibrillators or cardiac resynchronisation devices) that can transmit information about heart rhythm, battery status and device performance to a secure platform. Clinicians at participating hospitals review these transmissions and can be alerted to potentially dangerous arrhythmias, device malfunctions, or signs of worsening heart failure — often before a patient notices symptoms.
Why this matters — for patients and the health system
For patients, particularly those with heart failure, remote monitoring reduces the need for frequent in-person clinic visits and can shorten the time to medical response in the event of a problem. For the health system, the service can reduce emergency admissions and improve resource allocation by prioritising in-person care for those who need it most. For expats living in Poland, access to such monitoring through NFZ means that the public health system is expanding digital services consistent with wider European practices.
Who can access it and what to expect
The pilot or rollout reported covers two hospitals in the voivodeship; patients eligible are those with implanted electrotherapy devices and clinical indications for ongoing surveillance. Because the service is financed by NFZ (Poland’s state health payer), availability is tied to public-insured status. In practice, this usually means the monitoring will be offered through cardiology departments or device clinics within the participating hospitals. Patients should expect enrolment to involve device-programmer set-up, consent to data transmission, and scheduled remote checks supplemented by face-to-face visits when needed.
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