What if hospital-level care could safely happen in a patient’s home instead of inside a hospital building? In this episode of PEMBA On Demand, Dr. Norman A. Chapin speaks with Dr. Mihir H. Patel about the growing hospital-at-home movement and what it means for physician leaders, health systems, and patients. Hospital at home refers to acute hospital-level care delivered in a patient’s home instead of a traditional inpatient bed, not simply remote monitoring or home health. The model has gained major momentum in recent years as health systems look for new ways to improve capacity, reduce harm, and deliver care in the right setting. Dr. Patel explains that hospital-at-home programs are designed to address three major challenges in modern healthcare: hospital capacity strain, the risks patients face inside hospitals, and the high cost of brick-and-mortar inpatient care. He walks through the types of diagnoses that often fit the model, including conditions like pneumonia, COPD exacerbations, CHF, cellulitis, UTIs, dehydration, and similar cases where patients need acute treatment but do not require ICU-level care. The conversation also explores how these programs actually work behind the scenes. Dr. Patel describes the mix of physicians, nurses, paramedics, pharmacists, case managers, and logistics teams needed to support care in the home. He and Dr. Chapin discuss how virtual visits, remote monitoring, medication delivery, and rapid-response workflows all play a role in making the model safe and scalable. A major focus of the episode is outcomes. Dr. Patel shares why mature hospital-at-home programs have shown encouraging results in patient safety, patient satisfaction, and readmissions. Public-facing hospital-at-home resources likewise describe the model as a patient-centered alternative that can improve care outcomes for appropriate adults while reducing exposure to hospital-associated complications. Dr. Chapin and Dr. Patel also discuss the business and policy side of the model, including fixed versus variable costs, reimbursement, and the importance of federal waiver support. The CMS Acute Hospital Care at Home waiver was extended for five years through 2030 in March 2026, giving health systems more certainty as they invest in infrastructure and staffing. The AMA reports that the waiver supports hospital-level home care for Medicare patients, and advocacy materials from the Advanced Care at Home Coalition show broad national participation by hospitals and health systems. The episode also highlights the role of technology. Dr. Patel explains how tablets, wireless monitoring devices, ambient AI documentation, and logistics coordination tools are becoming increasingly important in hospital-at-home workflows. He offers a practical look at how these technologies can support earlier intervention, improve efficiency, and help teams manage care across multiple patients and locations. Later in the conversation, Dr. Patel reflects on his own career path and why he chose to pursue the Physician Executive MBA at the University of Tennessee. He shares how the program helped him think beyond individual patient encounters and better understand finance, operations, workflow design, and system-level leadership. He also discusses his work in medical writing and his involvement with The Hospitalist, which is the Society of Hospital Medicine’s monthly newsmagazine. This episode is both a practical overview of hospitals at home and a thoughtful reflection on physician fulfillment. Dr. Patel closes with a powerful reminder that success is not only about titles, income, or credentials. For physicians, real success also means finding a path that supports personal well-being, family life, and meaningful patient care. Key Topics Discussed What hospital at home really means Why health systems are...