RPM kits market set to grow through 2035
Market forecasts predict strong growth in remote patient monitoring kits through 2035, driven by value-based care—and family medicine is expected to lead adoption as RPM shifts routine monitoring off clinic panels reported. The catch: practices must redesign workflows so device data is actionable, not just another alert stream.
ResearchAndMarkets projected the global remote patient monitoring market to grow from about $9.4 billion in 2025 to roughly $88 billion by 2035 (≈25% CAGR). secure.businesswire.com IndexBox’s March 14, 2026 update flags mainstream clinical adoption and “AI‑driven analytics and multi‑parameter sensors” as core drivers of kit replacement cycles and premiumization through 2035. indexbox.io Top RPM procedure claim volumes increased nearly 1,300% from 2019 through 2022, reflecting rapid billing uptake. definitivehc.com The number of Medicare enrollees using RPM was more than ten times higher in 2022 than in 2019, per HHS telehealth data. telehealth.hhs.gov Primary care—including family practice—now delivers a large share of RPM services, with primary care, cardiology and nephrology accounting for most RPM claims in 2021. omnimd.com A family medicine–led COVIDCare@Home RPM program demonstrated feasibility and safety in community settings. cmajopen.ca The American Medical Association’s RPM Playbook lists “Forming the team” and “Designing the workflow” as explicit implementation steps to make device data clinically usable. ama-assn.org CMS CPT codes for RPM (99453, 99454, 99457) permit billing for clinical‑staff time and general supervision, enabling delegation to MAs or nurses for monitoring tasks. aama-ntl.org Mayo Clinic’s nurse‑based RPM program has supported nearly 22,000 patients and showed lower 30‑day hospitalization (13.7% vs. 18.0%), ICU admission (2.3% vs. 4.2%), and mortality (0.5% vs. 1.7%) among engaged COVID patients. frontiersin.org RPM after discharge at Mayo was associated with a drop in 30‑day readmissions from 23.7% to 18.2% in monitored patients. frontiersin.org A multisite implementation of home BP kits found 1,748 EHR orders but only 45% of patients returned any BP data and 16% provided “meaningful” BP data, underscoring the need for operational support and patient activation. jabfm.org Telemedicine surveys report that clinicians see reduced wait times and lower no‑show rates with virtual care models, a potential scheduling efficiency gain when RPM is well integrated. press.doximity.com Health IT reporting shows AI‑driven alert triage and bi‑directional EHR integrations can cut nonactionable alerts and automate documentation, turning raw device streams into concise clinical summaries. healthcareitnews.com Team‑based models reduce clinician burnout in primary care but only sustain benefits when staffing levels and centralized workflows are preserved, per Stanford research. med.stanford.edu