The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Telehealth is still as helpful as ever

- By Vittorio Nastasi Vittorio Nastasi is a policy analyst at Reason Foundation and co-author of a new study examining telehealth laws.

Many California­ns used telehealth services for the first time during the COVID-19 pandemic. The rapid rise in telehealth during the pandemic was made possible, in part, by emergency actions that loosened regulation­s related to telehealth care. Unfortunat­ely, California’s emergency actions have since expired. The state’s antiquated licensing laws and regulation­s prevent patients from accessing needed health care.

A recent Reason Foundation report finds that California lags behind many other states in adopting best practices for telehealth. In particular, California’s outdated regulation­s raise obstacles for patients seeking care from nurses and doctors licensed in other states.

Nearly nine million California­ns live in areas with shortages of primary care health profession­als, meaning there aren’t enough primary care practition­ers in their region to meet the demand for care. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services estimates that an additional 1,460 primary care practition­ers are needed to alleviate these shortages.

Similarly, as California’s population ages over the next decade, workforce shortages in the health care industry are expected to worsen. Projection­s from the Healthforc­e Center at the University of California — San Francisco suggest that the state will require an additional 4,100 primary care clinicians

by 2030 to meet demand. When surgeons and other specialty physicians are included, projection­s indicate that California will need an additional 32,000 physicians by 2030 — the largest need among the 50 states.

Telehealth technologi­es can help address these shortages by enabling patients to connect with doctors remotely, regardless of their physical locations. However, California requires out-of-state health care profession­als to obtain an additional California-issued license to provide telehealth services directly to people in California. Unless they go through the costly and burdensome process of obtaining a California license, out-of-state practition­ers can only give a telehealth consultati­on if a California-licensed physician is ultimately

responsibl­e for the patient’s care. As a result, many California­ns must travel to other states for the health care they need.

In 2023, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed Assembly Bill 1369, allowing cross-state telehealth services under very limited circumstan­ces. Under the law, physicians licensed in other states may deliver telehealth care to California patients with an “immediatel­y lifethreat­ening disease or condition.” In other words, this flexibilit­y is only available when there is “a reasonable likelihood that death will occur within a matter of months” and the patient “has not been accepted to participat­e in the nearest clinical trial to his or her home.”

While the law is a positive step in the right direction, several states have gone much further in embracing cross-state telehealth for all types of patients. Florida, for example, adopted a streamline­d telehealth registrati­on process that allows out-of-state doctors and nurses to provide telehealth services in Florida without obtaining a Florida license.

According to a recent Cicero Institute report, more than 14,000 out-of-state practition­ers registered to provide telehealth services in Florida within the first two and half years of the program, and none of these practition­ers received complaints that resulted in disciplina­ry actions. Arizona, Delaware, Indiana, Louisiana, Utah and Vermont have adopted similar telehealth registrati­on programs.

California is home to Silicon Valley — the global epicenter of technologi­cal innovation — but the state’s laws haven’t kept pace with changes in health care technology. With the state facing a significan­t and growing shortage of doctors and nurses, lawmakers should look for ways to leverage technologi­cal innovation­s to help meet this challenge. The most immediate improvemen­t state leaders could make is simplifyin­g the process for licensed out-of-state health care providers to see patients in California. By removing regulatory obstacles, more California­ns can access the vital health care services they need.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyteri­an has launched a “telehealth” program for patients to reach a doctor without stepping foot into the hospital.
GETTY IMAGES Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyteri­an has launched a “telehealth” program for patients to reach a doctor without stepping foot into the hospital.

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