“I’m thinking maybe I am going through a heart attack,” Fredrick said. He wasn’t experiencing a heart attack, Fredrick had contracted COVID-19. Knowing he had high blood pressure and some other health complications, Fredrick said he became very anxious about his test results. But that fear began to subside when he heard the “calmness” in the voices of the nurses who began to monitor him through a remote patient monitoring program offered at the Medical University of South Carolina. Fredrick, of Mullins, South Carolina, was monitored in his home by nurses Eric Quinlivan, R.N., outreach clinical coordinator for Center for Telehealth, and Cheryl Hamill, R.N., telehealth remote patient monitoring coordinator. Both were located more than 100 miles away. They contacted him daily by phone to learn about his symptoms and provide instructions on how to improve his condition.