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. 2024 Dec;102(4):833-852.
doi: 10.1111/1468-0009.12713. Epub 2024 Aug 19.

Reforming Physician Licensure in the United States to Improve Access to Telehealth: State, Regional, and Federal Initiatives

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Reforming Physician Licensure in the United States to Improve Access to Telehealth: State, Regional, and Federal Initiatives

James René Jolin et al. Milbank Q. 2024 Dec.

Abstract

Policy Points The reinstitution of pre-COVID-19 pandemic licensure regulations has impeded interstate telehealth. This has disproportionately impacted patients who live near a state border; geographically mobile patients, such as college students; and patients with rare diseases who may need care from a specialist outside their state. Several promising and feasible reforms are available, at both state and federal levels, to facilitate interstate telehealth. For example, states can offer exemptions to licensure requirements for certain types of telehealth such as follow-up care or create licensure registries that impose little reduced paperwork and fees on physicians. On the federal level, congressional interventions that mimic the Department of Veterans Affairs Maintaining Internal Systems and Strengthening Integrated Outside Networks (VA MISSION) Act of 2018 can waive provider licensing and geographic restrictions to telehealth within certain federal programs such as Medicare. Any discussion of medical licensure reform, however, must also consider the current political climate, one in which states are taking divergent stances on sensitive topics such as reproductive care, gender-affirming care, and substance use treatments.

Keywords: digital health law; physician licensure; telehealth.

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Conflict of interest statement

No disclosures were reported.

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