Remote Patient Monitoring in New Mexico.
Real-time vital sign monitoring with FDA-cleared cellular devices. Medicare billing, Centennial Care coverage, and compliance details for New Mexico providers.
How does RPM work for providers in New Mexico?
Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM) is available to New Mexico providers through Medicare CPT codes 99453, 99454, 99457, 99458. Medicare covers RPM federally at uniform rates. Centennial Care provides partial supplementary coverage for dual-eligible patients. With 0.4M residents aged 65+ (17.5% of the population) and high prevalence of diabetes, heart disease, COPD, New Mexico has strong demand for continuous vital sign monitoring. CCN Health provides FDA-cleared cellular devices and automated EHR documentation — integrating with 5+ major health systems including Presbyterian Healthcare Services and University of New Mexico Health implementing RPM programs. New Mexico's predominantly rural geography makes remote monitoring especially critical for healthcare access.
Medicare Billing
RPM billing in New Mexico.
RPM uses federally standardized CPT codes with uniform reimbursement across New Mexico. Centennial Care provides partial supplementary Medicaid coverage for dual-eligible patients.
Initial setup and patient education for RPM device(s)
Device supply with daily recordings, per 30 days
Remote physiologic monitoring treatment, first 20 min/month
Each additional 20 min of RPM treatment management
~$175-$220/mo per patient
20 minutes of interactive communication per month (99457); 16 days of data transmission per 30-day period (99454)
Medicare covers RPM federally at uniform rates. Centennial Care provides partial supplementary coverage for dual-eligible patients.
Billing Requirements
FDA-cleared device required for data collection
Patient must transmit data for at least 16 of 30 days
Established patient with in-person visit within prior 12 months
Patient consent required before initiating monitoring
Clinical staff must review and act on transmitted data
New Mexico Medicaid Supplement
Centennial Care provides partial supplementary coverage — check current Centennial Care fee schedules for dual-eligible RPM rates.
Regulatory Landscape
RPM compliance in New Mexico.
Beyond federal Medicare requirements, New Mexico has specific telehealth, licensure, and privacy regulations that affect RPM programs.
Interstate Licensure
- *New Mexico is not currently a member of the Interstate Medical Licensure Compact. Providers delivering RPM services must hold a valid New Mexico medical license.
EHR Integrations
RPM-compatible EHRs.
Major New Mexico health systems like Presbyterian Healthcare Services and University of New Mexico Health use EHR platforms that CCN Health integrates with. Each integration includes automated RPM documentation, billing, and clinical workflows.
PointClickCare
889 integration guides
ALIS
887 integration guides
Ethizo
240 integration guides
athenahealth
240 integration guides
Charm Health
240 integration guides
MatrixCare
240 integration guides
Epic
240 integration guides
August Health
240 integration guides
FAQ
RPM in New Mexico questions.
As a predominantly rural state, New Mexico providers particularly benefit from RPM's remote care capabilities, reducing the need for patients to travel long distances. Centennial Care offers partial supplementary coverage for dual-eligible patients. High prevalence of diabetes, heart disease, COPD among New Mexico's patient population drives RPM enrollment.
Centennial Care provides partial supplementary coverage for RPM services. Medicare covers RPM federally at uniform rates. Centennial Care provides partial supplementary coverage for dual-eligible patients. For dual-eligible beneficiaries, providers can bill both Medicare and Medicaid to maximize reimbursement.
New Mexico's 0.4M seniors (17.5% of the population, +20% by 2035 projected growth) represent the primary RPM-eligible population. The state's high prevalence of diabetes and heart disease makes blood pressure monitors, glucose meters, and weight scales the most-deployed RPM devices. Dual-eligible patients in skilled nursing and assisted living settings often have the highest clinical acuity and RPM engagement.
New Mexico has approximately 0.4M residents aged 65+ (17.5% of the population), with +20% by 2035 projected growth. Vast rural areas and tribal communities create high demand for remote monitoring. Presbyterian Healthcare is the state's largest integrated system. Significant health disparities drive need for RPM/CCM.
RPM in New Mexico must comply with federal Medicare billing requirements and HIPAA. New Mexico does not currently have a comprehensive state privacy law beyond HIPAA, but standard patient consent and data security requirements apply. New Mexico is not part of the Interstate Medical Licensure Compact — providers must hold a valid New Mexico license to deliver RPM services. New Mexico has telehealth parity. Centennial Care managed care covers remote monitoring services across the state.
This page provides general informational guidance only and does not constitute legal, compliance, or billing advice. Telehealth regulations, Medicaid coverage, and state privacy laws change frequently. Verify current requirements with your state health department, payers, and qualified healthcare compliance counsel before making program decisions. Demographic data is based on U.S. Census Bureau estimates. Data last verified: March 2026.
Other Programs
More programs in New Mexico.
Explore other Medicare remote care programs available to New Mexico providers.
CCM
Chronic Care Management
Non-face-to-face care coordination for patients with multiple chronic conditions.
PCM
Principal Care Management
Focused management of a single high-complexity chronic condition.
BHI
Behavioral Health Integration
Behavioral health screening and collaborative care in primary care settings.
RTM
Remote Therapeutic Monitoring
Therapy outcome monitoring for musculoskeletal and respiratory rehabilitation.


