Telemedicine boom amid coronavirus pandemic is 'here to stay'

Telemedicine has become increasingly popular over the last decade, and the coronavirus pandemic established the trend as a key part of health care going forward.

“It’s not new — we’ve heard about telehealth for almost probably two decades or so,” Jonathan Wiik, principal of healthcare strategy at TransUnion Healthcare, told Yahoo Finance. “Unfortunately like most things in the world, it comes down to money. What COVID did that was unique from anything else is that it forced health care to happen in a remote fashion. Because at that point, there were so many unknowns when COVID first happened back in March, when they shut airplanes and restaurants and everything down.”

In-person visits plummeted in April. (Chart: Epic Health Research Network)
In-person visits plummeted in April. (Chart: Epic Health Research Network)

Telehealth visits increased by 50% year over year during the first quarter of 2020, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). And by the middle of July, telemedicine visits accounted for just 21% of doctor visits, a 69% drop from April, according to Epic Health Research Network, an electronic health record company, as doctor offices began opening again.

Despite the drop from the initial peak, Wiik said, telemedicine is “here to stay at a higher rate because people realized they could go there and it’s still something they could do.”

Dr Greg Gulbransen takes part in a telemedicine call with a patient while maintaining visits with both his regular patients and those confirmed to have the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) at his pediatric practice in Oyster Bay, New York, U.S., April 13, 2020.  Picture taken April 13, 2020. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
Dr Greg Gulbransen takes part in a telemedicine call with a patient while maintaining visits with both his regular patients and those confirmed to have COVID-19 at his pediatric practice in Oyster Bay, NY, April 13, 2020. (REUTERS/Lucas Jackson)

The coverage problem

After many primary care offices were forced to shut down or limit their visits to only COVID-related patients, insurers began waiving fees and deductibles for telehealth services.

But as the country reached fall 2020, some began stopping those waivers: Anthem (ANTM) and UnitedHealthcare (UNH). It’s unclear if other insurance companies will follow suit, particularly as the U.S. continues battling another wave of the virus.

Wiik, who previously worked in the health insurance industry, explained why insurance companies often shy away from providing coverage for telehealth in the same manner they do for other services.

“Part of it is there’s a lot of fraud in health care and a lot of medical documentation that has to happen to ensure that the care that’s being billed is the care that’s being provided,” he said. “Insurance companies wanted to reimburse less of a rate for an outpatient visit. There wasn’t what’s called ‘payment parity’ between an in-person visit and a telehealth visit.”

The office building of health insurer Anthem is seen in Los Angeles, California February 5, 2015.  REUTERS/Gus Ruelas/File Photo
The office building of health insurer Anthem is seen in Los Angeles, California February 5, 2015. REUTERS/Gus Ruelas/File Photo

He continued: “You can do telehealth visits, but we’re going to pay $20 instead of $100. So hospitals and physician clinics had a choice, ‘Well, do I want to see people in person for $100 or see them remotely for $20?’ I’m just throwing numbers out there … I know that they’re substantial, and I know they’re that far apart.”