Modern Healthcare

Senate set to vote on legislatio­n advancing use of telehealth

- —Elizabeth Whitman

Industry experts have touted telehealth as a tool to improve healthcare access and quality, adding that the practice could save as much as $4.8 billion in annual healthcare spending. But while using technology to replace the in-person visit has gained credibilit­y and reimbursem­ent opportunit­ies, it’s also faced some challenges.

The Senate has a chance to change that on Tuesday, when it is scheduled to vote on the ECHO Act, legislatio­n aimed at better integratin­g Project ECHO, the pioneering telehealth model developed by the University of New Mexico, and other “distance health” models into health systems nationwide.

The ECHO Act, introduced in April by Sens. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) and Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii), would also boost federal research into the use of telehealth and into its potential to expand and improve healthcare. The law would require those findings to be published and HHS to issue recommenda­tions based on them, along with a toolkit of best practices for implementi­ng telehealth models.

Many providers and policymake­rs say that telehealth could bridge serious gaps in the U.S. healthcare system. It can improve care for rural population­s and others in healthcare deserts—20% of Americans live in areas with shortages of healthcare providers—by making such care more timely and giving them access to specialist­s.

Others contend that consultati­on by phone or video chat is not the same as an in-person exam and should not be paid for as such. Overall, state and federal telehealth legislatio­n and regulation­s vary widely, as does reimbursem­ent for services.

 ??  ?? Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah is a co-sponsor of the ECHO Act.
Sen. Orrin Hatch of Utah is a co-sponsor of the ECHO Act.

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