In the United States, doctors need a valid medical license from the state where their patient is located during care. This “place-of-service” rule means that if a doctor gives telehealth care to a patient in another state, the doctor must be licensed in that state. This applies to all healthcare providers like physicians, nurse practitioners, therapists, and others.
Each state has its own rules about licenses. They differ in eligibility, what work providers can do, fees, continuing education, and renewal. These differences make it harder to provide virtual care across states and add more paperwork. Many healthcare providers find it difficult and expensive to get and keep licenses in many states.
One way to make this easier is the Interstate Medical Licensure Compact (IMLC). Over 40 states participate. It helps eligible doctors get licenses faster in other compact states. Doctors with a clear license in their home state can apply in other states with less paperwork. But they still must meet all state rules.
The IMLC mostly helps physicians and physician assistants. Other providers, like nurse practitioners and social workers, still face tough requirements. Some states offer telehealth-specific registrations or temporary licenses for short-term care if patients are only in another state temporarily. Still, full licenses are usually needed for ongoing telehealth care across states.
These legal rules require teamwork between clinical staff, legal experts, billing teams, and administrators to keep everything running smoothly and follow the law.
Due to these barriers, it takes health organizations about 23 months on average to go from wanting a digital health tool to fully using it, including telehealth. Getting licenses, verifying, renewing, and following rules take time and effort.
This often makes practices limit telehealth to their own state or only serve certain patient groups. This reduces patient access and slows growth. Especially in rural and underserved areas, telehealth benefits are less when providers cannot offer care across state lines.
Still, when practices handle licensure requirements well and follow legal workflows, telehealth helps keep care consistent, reduces travel for patients, offers care beyond usual hours, and improves patient experience.
Laws that require telehealth to be paid like in-person visits raise telehealth use by about 23%. States with these laws see more patient use of telehealth. But inconsistent payment rules in Medicaid, Medicare, and private insurance, plus complex billing, still block growth.
Practices must keep watching laws and rules, especially since many pandemic-related changes have ended or changed. Ongoing learning and policy tracking help keep services legal and financially stable while expanding telehealth.
Besides legal and administrative problems, technology issues make telehealth harder, especially in rural or underserved places:
Fixing these problems means investing in telehealth software, teaching patients how to use it, and offering community support.
For medical managers and IT staff, artificial intelligence (AI) and automation can cut down operational problems and make compliance easier for telehealth across states.
Some technology providers offer AI-powered phone and communication services that automate patient calls, appointment reminders, and pre-visit checks. This lets staff focus more on complex legal and clinical tasks while patient experience improves.
Expanding telehealth needs help beyond technology and daily work. Staying up to date on licenses and telehealth rules means working with professional groups like the American Medical Association (AMA). They provide resources and advocacy. Some practices hire health law firms with experience in telemedicine across states to reduce risks in licensing, prescribing, and privacy.
Organizations like the Federation of State Medical Boards track rule changes and offer tools to track licenses. Being active in these networks and legislative updates helps leaders learn about new compacts, payment changes, and telehealth laws.
Healthcare leaders who expanded telehealth across states shared some lessons:
They agree that good planning, knowing regulations, and being ready to change operations are needed for telehealth to grow well.
Giving telehealth care across state lines in the U.S. means dealing with different state licenses, privacy rules, payment policies, and prescribing laws. For medical administrators, owners, and IT managers, these rules can slow growth and cause problems without careful work. Using tools like the Interstate Medical Licensure Compact, telehealth registrations, and technology that automates license checks, documentation, and billing can make work easier.
Staying legal needs teamwork between legal, clinical, and billing teams. AI-driven automation helps reduce errors and boost efficiency. Telehealth helps increase patient access, especially in areas with fewer providers, but this depends on solving interstate license and other operational challenges. With the right plans and technology, practices can widen their telehealth services legally and steadily.
Telehealth is a digital health solution that connects patients and clinicians through real-time audio and video technology, used as an alternative to traditional in-person care for diagnosis, consultation, treatment, education, and management.
Telehealth increases continuity of care, extends access beyond normal hours, reduces patient travel burdens, addresses clinician shortages, improves patient wellness, enhances quality of care, and raises patient satisfaction.
Barriers include inconsistent reimbursement models, interstate licensure challenges, legal and regulatory issues, security concerns, and logistical challenges.
Common uses include follow-up care for chronic conditions, behavioral health consultations, post-operative care, lifestyle management, and remote monitoring, especially for patients facing mobility barriers.
Implementing telehealth within practices allows clinicians to manage follow-ups and urgent care effectively, enhancing patient experiences and maintaining strong patient-clinician relationships.
Practices should identify a need, form a team, define success, evaluate vendors, design workflows, prepare care teams, implement the technology, evaluate success, and scale.
Proper documentation is critical for reimbursement, requiring accurate records of visit durations and compliance with coding guidelines for payer requirements.
Practices must understand CPT codes, payment models, payer coverage, and regularly update on evolving reimbursement rates and state regulations.
The AMA provides resources, guidelines, and tools to assist practices in successfully implementing telehealth, with a focus on meeting healthcare demands and supporting clinicians.
Practices should include legal and billing teams early in the process, identify necessary state licenses, research the Interstate Licensure Compact, and check malpractice insurance coverage.