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Trending in Telehealth: January 6 – 27, 2025

Trending in Telehealth highlights state legislative and regulatory developments that impact the healthcare providers, telehealth and digital health companies, pharmacists, and technology companies that deliver and facilitate the delivery of virtual care.

Trending in the past weeks:

  • Provider training
  • Telepharmacy
  • Licensure exceptions

A CLOSER LOOK

Proposed Legislation & Rulemaking:

  • In Ohio, the Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services proposed amendments to the mobile response and stabilization services (MRSS) rule. The changes would clarify when telehealth is a “clinically appropriate” modality for delivering MRSS, such as when a clinician requests a mobile response and that clinician is not available to respond in person as part of the MRSS team.
  • New York’s FY 2026 budget includes legislation to join the Nurse Licensure Compact (NLC). Joining the NLC would make it easier for certain categories of nurses licensed in other states to practice in New York either physically or through telemedicine, and for New York providers to offer virtual care to their patients who travel to other states.
  • Also in New York, Senate Bill 1430 passed the Senate and was referred to the Assembly. The proposed legislation would establish the New York state abortion clinical training program within the Department of Health. The curriculum would include training on the delivery of abortion and other reproductive healthcare services through telehealth.
  • Vermont’s Office of Professional Regulation proposed amendments to the Administrative Rules of the Board of Pharmacy that further elaborate on the state’s telepharmacy practicing and licensure requirements. Under the proposed rules, telepharmacists would be subject to the same rules and standards applicable to all modalities of pharmacy practice. The proposed rule also provides that pharmacists licensed in other jurisdictions who wish to provide only telepharmacy services from outside of Vermont to individuals located in Vermont may apply for an out-of-state telepharmacist license.

Finalized Legislation & Rulemaking Activity:

  • North Dakota adopted rule amendments that provide exceptions to physician licensure for telehealth providers licensed in another state, including for continuation of care for an established patient, care while the patient is located within the state temporarily, preparation for a scheduled in-person visit, practitioner-to-practitioner consultations, and emergency circumstances.
  • The Ohio governor signed Senate Bill 95 into law. The legislation provides an exception to current state law that prohibits pharmacists from dispensing dangerous drugs through telehealth or virtual means. For more information on this rule, please see our previous post.
  • The Texas Medical Board repealed 22 Tex. Admin. Code § 170, which included regulations concerning the electronic prescribing of controlled substances. The board also repealed 22 Tex. Admin. Code § 174, concerning telemedicine generally, and replaced it with the new 22 Tex. Admin. Code § 175. These regulations state that a physician may not provide telemedicine medical services to patients in Texas unless the physician holds a full Texas [...]

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New Year, New Telehealth Opportunities

As we reflect upon how the health care industry has changed in 2015 and what we expect to see in 2016, there is one area that stands out as having great promise for continued growth—telehealth.

  • There were more than 200 telehealth-related bills introduced in 42 states in 2015, many of which helped to encourage the growth and expansion of telehealth. More than half of the states now have laws that mandate some degree of coverage of telemedicine programs by private payers. In addition, nearly a quarter of the states have joined the Interstate Medical Licensure Compact, which provides a more streamlined licensure process for physicians who are located in a “Compact state” and who provide telemedicine services to residents of another “Compact state.” In 2016, we expect even more states will adopt laws to require health insurance coverage for telemedicine services and ease the licensure requirements for health care professionals who are engaged in multi-state telemedicine programs. See our article, “States Begin 2016 with the Expansion of Telehealth Services,” for additional details.
  • There has been a marked increase in consumer investment in personal health and wellness, partly as a cost reduction strategy in light of high-deductible health plans, over the past few years. Consumers are particularly excited about the possibilities of telehealth, which has spurred the expansion of direct-to-consumer telehealth programs. In 2016, we anticipate an increase in the number of consumers who use telehealth services, as well as an increase in the types of telehealth technologies used.
  • An increasing number of employers—ranging from big to small—offered telemedicine as a benefit to employees in 2015 in an effort to reduce health care costs and as a means of improving employee health. Given the broad breadth of coverage included in the cost of employer-sponsored coverages, and the desire for employers to improve employee health to increase productivity and satisfaction levels, we anticipate that even more employers will turn to telemedicine as a solution in 2016.
  • The telehealth programs of accountable care organizations (ACOs) and clinically integrated networks (CINs) proved to improve patient access to care (particularly in the area of behavioral health) and deliver quality care at a lower cost—a critical imperative in the post-Accountable Care Act era of value-based purchasing. The realization of these benefits in 2015 will likely contribute to an increase in the number of ACOs and CINs using telemedicine as a tool in 2016.
  • There was a marked rise in 2015 in the number of partnerships between U.S. health care providers and international institutions for U.S. physicians (particularly in certain orthopedic and oncology sub-specialty areas) to provide consultations to international physicians about their patient cases, as well as “second opinion” programs where U.S. physicians review the medical records and diagnostic tests of patients located abroad, and then render a second opinion to that patient. We anticipate that these international telemedicine arrangements will continue throughout 2016 as U.S. providers search for ways to expand their patient base and grow their brands internationally.

If these telehealth trends [...]

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