Telemedicine after COVID-19: What happened and what's next?

Christopher C. Eades (ceades@hallrender.com) is an attorney in the Indianapolis office and James Junger (jjunger@hallrender.com) is an attorney in the Milwaukee offices of Hall, Render, Killian, Heath & Lyman PC. Angela M. Deneweth (adeneweth@hallrenderas.com) is an advisor in the Dallas office of Hall Render Advisory Services.

The deadline for this article fell on December 2020. At that time, the world eagerly awaited the broad distribution of vaccines that would stop the spread of COVID-19, which will hopefully be underway by the time of publication.

After the end of the pandemic comes the time to clean up and move forward. In the next few months, public health emergency (PHE) declarations will lapse, closing the door on regulatory flexibilities that have allowed healthcare organizations to devote more resources to patient care. Compliance professionals may find that they have two distinct but related priorities in the next few months: (1) assessing their organizations’ compliance with new (or newly restored) regulatory and billing requirements and (2) helping their organizations chart a path forward.

The rapid expansion of virtual care services—referred to as telemedicine and telehealth in this article—will be a lasting legacy of the COVID-19 pandemic. Telemedicine presents compliance risks looking both backward and forward. While Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial payers modified billing rules to facilitate a shift to virtual care, it is only half of the picture. The practice of medicine, including telemedicine, is still fundamentally a question of state-by-state regulation, which will likely lead to friction as compliance professionals and their colleagues move toward a future in which patients expect to access their providers from home.

This document is only available to members. Please log in or become a member.
 


Would you like to read this entire article?

If you already subscribe to this publication, just log in. If not, let us send you an email with a link that will allow you to read the entire article for free. Just complete the following form.

* required field