On the Other Side of the Microphone

Recently, Healthcare IT Today (a client of mine) was gracious enough to interview me about all things telehealth. The podcast is live, and you can give it listen here. As I’m often the one asking the questions, it was a nice change of pace to be the interview subject this time around.

Naturally, a good chunk of the conversation focused on my eBook – namely, why telehealth hasn’t had the post-pandemic comeback that so many healthcare stakeholders expected. Host John Lynn and I also tried to think of where and how telehealth might be able to expand these days without much heavy lifting.

To celebrate my appearance on the Healthcare IT Today podcast, I’m offering the eBook at a discounted price of $14.99. The discount applies until Sept. 9, which is when I’ll be back in the office after a bit of time off at the end of the summer. The half-off price applies to everyone, whether you graced the podcast with a listen or not. I’ve toyed with the idea of discount codes, but I wasn’t about to do that for the first time before I go traipsing around the woods in New Hampshire and Maine with limited Internet access, on the off chance I ended up breaking something on my website (again).

As always, there’s more information on the product page for Telehealth’s Next Chapter: A Tale of Volume and Value.

I hope you have a pleasant rest of the summer.

The Beastwood Files: Spring 2025

I’ve had an interesting few months. I finally bit the bullet, upgrading my website and selecting a hosting provider. The former was a good idea, and long overdue, as it let me set up a store where I could get rich selling digital content. The latter turned out not to be such a good idea since 1) it somehow managed to create a second WordPress log-in for me and 2) said log-in was linked to me staging site, not my actual website.

This meant the blog posts I created on what I thought was my existing website were in fact on the new version, which is also were I happened to create the product page for my eBook (which I also happened to edit and design over the course of the spring).

For the life of me, I couldn’t figure out how to get the new blog posts – namely, the April and May roundups you’ve come to know and love, or at the very least tolerate – to appear on the page that listed all the blog posts. That seemed like kind of a big deal. There were also some quirky tweaks to my new (or maybe existing?) website that weren’t the best, and it wasn’t clear whether they were the result of the site migration or user error.

As a result, I scrapped the hosting plan and stuck with a Business version of my old WordPress site. I didn’t lose any necessary functionality, and I didn’t end up spending more. What I’d been paying for the hosting service basically now pays for a business email address, with the added bonus that it’s not Webmail, which as far as I can tell no one actually likes.

The issue – and this is where it gets interesting, folks – is that I decided to do this a few days after I launched my eBook, which meant to link to it was dead. It also meant the April and May roundups disappeared, along with my heartfelt look back at five years of full-time freelancing. I was able to repost the eBook product page (which was easy enough to rewrite) and the career retrospective (which I’d drafted in Word), and I managed to rewrite the blog post introducing the eBook to the world.

That said, I didn’t bother redoing the roundups. To be blunt, I didn’t feel like it. Plus, the list of Stuff I Read was a bit short, and my Adventures in Fatherhood were a bit repetitive, redundant, and repetitive.

So, instead, I present to you, my loving audience, a quarterly roundup. This includes links to everything published in the last three months, along with some fun tales of raising a child that I may or may not have shared with you already.

Stuff I Wrote

Dang, this list looks a lot more impressive when it covers three months instead of one, doesn’t it?

Adventures in Fatherhood

  • Over Memorial Day weekend, I ran a marathon in Burlington, Vermont. The course was two Figure-8 loops. All told, I went through downtown Burlington four times. This meant I ran up the hill on Main Street four times. My wife told my son this was a mean thing to make the runners do. She wasn’t wrong – and for the next two weeks, my son, who has entered the phase of asking so, so many questions – humored me a few times a day by asking, “Why did the marathon do a mean thing to the runners?”
  • Meanwhile, over Fourth of July weekend in the White Mountains of New Hampshire, my son was introduced to the idea that Daddy attracts mosquitos almost immediately upon going outside. (Don’t ask me why. They always have.) He then proceeded to humor us by repeatedly saying, “The bugs love Daddy.”
  • We’ve recently discovered store-bought frozen water- and fruit-based confections. This is lovely – but, as my son prefers to eat approximately three bites of things before declaring, “All done,” it also means at any given time there are at least two unfinished treats in the freezer. That also means there are often at least two child-sized bowls or plates in the freezer, which is a challenge when, say, we arbitrarily decide the Cheerios need their own bowl.

With any luck, I’ll get back to monthly posts starting in August, just in time for everyone to stop caring about work until Labor Day.

The Future of Telehealth: eBook Is LIVE

My first eBook – Telehealth’s Next Chapter: A Tale of Volume and Value – is officially live and available for download.

The eBook is a couple years in the making. Back in 2023, telehealth utilization was two years into a plateau following a mid-pandemic peak. In a lengthy blog post, I speculated on what that meant for telehealth’s future, and whether there was anything the healthcare industry could do to shape that fate. The post got a lot of positive feedback, including several recommendations for what I could add to augment my thesis and turn the post into an eBook.

If you’ve known me for even a short time, you know I like challenges. You also know I tend to overextend myself juuuuust a little bit – which is why, amid building a freelance business, raising a child, running marathons, hiking up mountains, and doing my best to clean the house, the eBook has finally arrived.

From a blog post to an eBook

So, what separates Telehealth’s Next Chapter: A Tale of Volume and Value from the blog post that preceded it?

  • There’s some historical perspective. This demonstrates that telehealth has pretty much always been about episodic care and explains why utilization has been on a plateau for four years running.
  • There’s a brief unpacking of the struggles of digital health companies not named Hinge Health, Omada Health, and (at the time I was writing at least) Hims & Hers. This offers perspective about why the road ahead for telehealth is a bit bumpy.
  • There’s a Debbie Downer take that the best time to act has passed us by. I think it’s because the industry’s bevy of stakeholders weren’t sufficiently motivated to act to remove barriers to adoption in the summer of 2021.
  • There’s an offer of a path forward – telehealth utilization that supplements value-based, purposeful in-person care in a wide range of scenarios – and a set of suggestions for how the many stakeholders involved will need to collaborate.
  • There are some lovely graphics, which I designed myself, and some of the best stock art that a free Canva account can buy.

Incredibly, over the course of 42 pages, there’s only one reference to running, and it’s in my bio. If I’m being honest, this very well might be the eBook’s greatest achievement.

Free for a little while longer

Initially, I planned to make the eBook available as a free download over Father’s Day weekend, complete with a great dad joke about it being my gift to you, and then charge folks for it. I even came up with a price of 73 cents per page, as a nod to Regina Holliday.

The idea, as I stated in a LinkedIn post I’ve since deleted as well as a blog post that has since disappeared for reasons I’ll explain, was to see if creating and publishing my own content would be a worthwhile extension of my freelance business.

Then, a few things happened in rapid succession.

  • I stopped using my web hosting service, which I’d decided wasn’t really meeting my needs. In doing so, I wiped out the version of my website that included the product page for the eBook and the blog post announcing it to the world. Oops.
  • As I transitioned back to WordPress, my website was down for a few days. At this point, I offered to send the eBook to anyone who asked me for it, as I had no way to collect anyone’s hard-earned money.
  • Sometime between finishing our Monday morning viewing of Daniel Tiger and attempting to start the work week, the wires that bring the Internet into our house got clipped. Even if I wanted to update my website, I couldn’t. (Unless I wanted to roll the dice with the open Wi-Fi at the public library, which I didn’t.)
  • I came to realize I never really gave a lot of thought – any, really – to how I planned to promote the eBook once I’d launched it.

Given all that, I’ve decided to make the eBook free for a bit longer, either as a download on this here website or by asking my nicely on LinkedIn or via email. The $30.66 cost will go into effect on July 8, after we’ve all recovered from the long weekend. 

The first of more to come

My rationale for charging for the eBook is partly to try to cover expenses (I paid my reviewers, got professional headshots, and upgraded my website) and partly to see if there’s true demand for this type of thing. It’s not the end of the world if I take a loss. For good or ill, in the back of my head this was as much of a passion project as it was a business venture, along with a fairly low-stress way to revive my rudimentary graphic design skills. Plus, it’s already had more views than my graduate thesis, which took a lot longer to write and cost a lot more to boot.

That said, it’s hard for me not to scratch the itch for longform writing. One of my Internet-less tasks this week was starting the outline for the next eBook I hope to write, which I’d previously scrawled on a few Post-It notes in my planner. The topic: Why the philosophy of patient engagement has made great strides in the last decade even if the market for patient engagement technology kinda sorta floundered. It probably won’t be 42 pages, but it also probably (hopefully?) won’t take me more than two years to write.

As long as my schedule allows for it, I intend to create more content of interest to the digital health community.

Hopefully, Panda Health’s Predicted Digital Health “Shakeup” Won’t Be Too Hasty

Earlier this summer, application marketplace Panda Health released a reported called The Great Shakeup suggesting that upheaval is coming to the digital health landscape.

The rationale is sound. At the beginning of the pandemic, hospitals and health systems implemented just about any technology application that would enable them to maintain care continuity, if not keep them in business. Given the severity of the need, the typical buying cycle of 12-18 months was truncated significantly – in some cases, to 12-18 hours. Considerations like system integration, workflow compatibility, and change management were an afterthought at best.

This was understandable given the circumstances. But three years have passed. That’s an important milestone if for no other reason than, as Panda Health points out. the typical contract with a digital health vendor is three to five years.

In other words, it’s renewal time. Given that health system leaders have had a lot of time to reflect on their decisions, things might get ugly.

Lots of churn in telehealth, as one might expect

In an interview with Healthcare IT Today (a client of mine), Panda Health President and COO Ryan Bengtson said the highest level of vendor churn is expected to be in the technology categories of telemedicine and remote patient monitoring.

As the saying goes, this is shocking but not surprising. As I wrote back in April, telehealth has evolved from a necessity to a luxury. Absent a transition to full-scale value-based care, telehealth only really makes sense in behavioral health and for Medicare beneficiaries being seen under an accountable care organization (ACO) model. It also just so happens that the market is ripe with point solutions representing seemingly every medical specialty or point of care within the patient journey.

Take these two points together and it’s clear that smart health systems will be taking a long, hard look at their telehealth portfolio. Bengtson said any point solution that doesn’t integrate with a health system’s larger clinical technology stack may be in trouble. Add to that the omnipresent desire to reduce the complexity and cost of managing multiple products that do the same thing and it’s clear that vendor consolidation is coming. (There’s probably a Game of Thrones reference to be made here, but I never watched it.)

An unclear path forward

The next couple years are going to be very interesting, in part because some of the most obvious solutions, like objects in the rearview mirror, are less appealing than they seem.

Platforms could solve the technology side of the point solution problem. It makes sense to host all the telehealth stuff in one place, right? But unless there’s some way to curate disparate telehealth offerings, surface recommendations to patients in the interface they’re familiar with (a portal, probably, sigh), and ensure that clinicians can connect to them as well, the care experience isn’t going to be much better.

Plus, doing the platform thing right really requires an all-or-nothing approach. It’s not just telehealth; it’s medication adherence, chronic care management, remote monitoring, and basically anything else that involves provisioning care in between appointments. After all, if some solutions are on a platform but others are floating harmlessly somewhere on the Internet, then there’s not really much incentive to go to the platform. Frustrated patients will abandon the telehealth experience in favor of the sometimes inconvenient but always familiar in-person appointment. As usage rates plummet, even the biggest technophile decision-makers will have a hard time justifying a renewal – and point solutions will suffer.

What about going all-in with a big vendor? They’ve been acquiring companies or otherwise expanding into specialties left and right, haven’t they? Well, yes – and Wall Street seems far from impressed with this approach. Teladoc Health is trading at 8% of its winter 2021 peak. Amwell is trading at just over 6% of its peak, also from winter 2021. (Both are as of July 20.) To roughly paraphrase Hello Health and Sherpaa co-founder Dr. Jay Parkinson, there are only so many cases of ink eye you can treat virtually.

The problem – as I also pointed out in my recent treatise and as others have said many, many times as well – is that patients are going to seek telehealth no matter where it comes from. They don’t care if it’s from their hospital, from retail health, from their insurer, from a concierge service, or from an app that advertises a coupon code on Facebook. Health systems that ignore this risk losing a lot of patients at the top of the funnel, only to see them in the ED years from now and not know a damn thing about their recent medical history.

All of this is to say that a cautious approach to digital health vendor churn may be warranted. Just because the revenue or year-over-year usage data is in the red doesn’t automatically mean a solution should get the axe. Health systems need to look a little deeper and consider who’s using a telehealth product and what they’ll do if it goes away.

If there’s a suitable alternative, or if they’ll maintain strong enough ties to stick around, then the health system may be able to get along without it. But if patients may walk out the (digital) (front) door and may not come back, then the telehealth tool may be worth keeping. Rewriting a vendor contract is harder, but engaging with patients who have come and gone is even harder.

Telehealth’s Day of Reckoning

In the board game Life, there’s a space near the end marked Day of Reckoning. At this point, players have to decide if they think they have enough money to win. If they think they do, they can keep playing. If they don’t, they place everything they have on one number (out of 10), spin the dial, and hope for the best while knowing there’s a 90% chance they’ll go bankrupt.

I’m beginning to think healthcare is facing a day of reckoning of sorts when it comes to telehealth. Three years after the pandemic, when sudden (and largely successful) adoption had us wondering what telehealth’s future looks like, utilization has plateaued. That has put organizations in the difficult position of trying to decide if they can move ahead with what they have – that is, if their existing telehealth offerings are enough to compete with All Those Disruptors Out There, not to mention the health systems down the street – or if they need to gamble on a strategy with a slight chance of succeeding.

It’s an unenviable position. Extenuating circumstances aren’t making the decision any easier for health system leaders who must tread carefully with telehealth investments but face external pressures to Do Something and avoid being disrupted by forces they can neither control nor predict. Vendors are equally challenged, as their accumulated expertise in the use case they have so carefully developed, tested, and rolled out smacks into the stark reality that point solutions (save for behavioral health) may not have a place in the long-term future of telehealth. Fortunately, knowing that utilization has plateaued but that demand remains strong can give the industry some direction – not a lot, admittedly, but some – for determining where to go next.

Providers are using telehealth – just not all that often

Recently, the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC) released data that put a pretty positive light on telehealth. The agency’s report suggested that 85% of physicians used telehealth at least once in 2021, up significantly from 15% in 2018-2019. In addition, 62% of physicians were fully or somewhat satisfied with their use of telehealth. Tellingly, there was little urban-rural divide when it came to utilization – an important data point in light of concerns that rural areas are in danger of being left behind as telehealth takes off. (Slightly higher percentages of telephone and video conferencing for telehealth in rural areas, as opposed to dedicated telehealth platforms, helps to explain how physicians and patients may be closing the gap.)

Peeking behind the curtain, though, the data presents some concerns.

  • Utilization is highest among physicians in a value-based care model such as an accountable care organization (ACO) and affiliated with large health systems. It’s lowest among physicians in small practices. (We’ll dive into this later.)
  • The majority of physicians (53%) use telehealth for less than 25% of their total patient visits.
  • A telehealth platform integrated with an electronic health record (EHR) – the option that arguably provides the best continuity with in-person care – is the least commonly used form of telehealth across all types of physicians, payment models, and care sites.

In other words, utilization and access aren’t being distributed as as equitably as the industry would like. Provider interest is there, but it depends largely on how a provider is being paid and whether they have the resources to support the technology being used. Our long-held suspicions about who uses telehealth, it turns out, continued to hold true through the pandemic.

Aside from behavioral health, utilization seems limited

Additional data on telehealth utilization highlights other concerns about where utilization is headed. First, there’s the FAIR Health assessment of commercial health insurance claims. From January 2022 until December 2022, telehealth visits as a percentage of all claims remained largely steady at 5.5%. This is less than January 2021, when utilization hit 7.0%, but an increase from December 2021, when telehealth was less than 5% of all claims.

The more interesting data point to me is the dominance of behavioral health, which accounted for roughly 60% of all telehealth claims. That means the dozens of other medical specialties – including primary care – only accounted for 40% of telehealth claims. It roughly aligns with McKinsey’s take on telehealth, too, which shows that telehealth accounts for 54% of all behavioral health visits but 14% of medical specialty visits and just 5% of procedural specialty visits. (Again, it confirms long-held suspicions about who is and isn’t interested in telehealth.)

Next, there’s the Bipartisan Policy Center’s assessment of Medicare claims. This report pegged telehealth at roughly 6.8% of all claims for the first nine months of 2021, with behavioral health accounting for a little more than one-third of all telehealth visits. (Primary care accounted for nearly 27%, which is far more than in the under-65 population.) If Medicare claims followed the same trends as reflected in FAIR Health’s look at commercial claims, then the 2022 figures are probably a bit lower.

Looking at these data points, and then looking at them in the context of the ONC data, it’s hard not to nod in agreement with the early 2022 assessment of Trilliant Health, which came to the following sobering conclusions about telehealth’s broader impact on the economy:

  • Nearly 46% of patients had just one telehealth visit in all of 2021, and another 34% had fewer than five. That explains, per the ONC’s data, how so many physicians had used telehealth “at least once” and also only used telehealth for a small percentage of their encounters.
  • In only one specialty – behavioral health – is telehealth a “substitute good” for in-person care. In all other specialties, including primary care, when choice isn’t constrained, patients prefer in-person care. (That doesn’t account for a return to the requirement for in-person visits prior to remote prescriptions of controlled substances at the end of the public health emergency, which the American Telemedicine Association is not too happy about.)
  • Accounting for the wide disparities in reimbursement rates for virtual care episodes as compared to in-person care episodes, telehealth’s potential total share of the healthcare market is all of 1%.

Is telehealth a luxury now?

Clearly, healthcare faces a dilemma. The technology that quite literally saved the industry in the spring of 2020 is no longer a commodity. Two separate studies, one of the general patient population and another of patients in oncology, both found that preferences have shifted to in-person visits, even if in-person visits were to cost more out of pocket that virtual visits.

In fact, Trilliant Health likened telehealth’s total addressable market to that of a luxury good, given that the total number of patients using telehealth more than several times a year falls at less than 10 million. The comparison of a virtual healthcare visit to a BMW or a Peleton may have ruffled some feathers, but it’s not that far off base.

One of telehealth’s most persistent criticisms has been that it’s largely available only to healthcare organizations that can afford to support it at scale and patients that can afford the technology to access it regularly. Audio-only telehealth filled some access gaps in the early days of the pandemic, but it has always remained a fraction of the total number of virtual visits. Until that changes, patients without broadband, reliable cell signals, and unlimited data plans won’t bother with telehealth. The same goes for small office physicians who, as the public health emergency ends, can no longer use video conferencing software but don’t have the technology budget, expertise, or willpower to invest in dedicated telehealth technology.

The other main complaint is that, under current care delivery and payment models, telehealth only makes fiscal sense in two scenarios: When reimbursement for virtual care is at or close to parity for in-person care, and when enough patients are covered under a value-based contract such as a Medicare ACO. Linking these scenarios to the data presented earlier, the first example explains the popularity of telehealth for behavioral health, and the second example points to the higher adoption levels for primary care in Medicare. (If you think telehealth for low-acuity urgent care makes fiscal sense, well, I have some stock in publicly traded telehealth vendors to sell you. It’s pretty cheap.)

The idea of telehealth as a luxury good and not a commodity stings even harder when we recall McKinsey’s rosy projection from 2020 that telehealth would be a $250 billion industry. It doesn’t help that a share of 1% of the market also comes with the stigma of 1% – a figure that to many represents privilege, wealth, and ignorance of the true needs of everyone else.

The thing is, the 1% figure is probably pretty realistic. After all, the types of medical visits associated with telehealth (behavioral health, primary care, remote monitoring, follow-up, etc.) reimburse at a lower rate than in-person visits. This is obvious for things like inpatient procedures, sure, but it’s also true for specialty consults, imaging scans, and a host of other in-person encounters that require the use of expensive equipment or a discussion among multiple providers. It shouldn’t be surprising that telehealth’s total market share is significantly less than its total share of visits.

Plus, if you’re going to be 1% of a market, it might as well be healthcare, which as of 2021 is a $4.3 trillion industry in the United States. One percent of that is still $43 billion. Heck, the far more impressive-sounding $250 billion is still only 5.8% of that figure – which isn’t too far off from telehealth’s utilization as a percentage of all visits.

Of course, there’s more to the story

It would be fine if the story ended here. Not great, not terrible, but fine. Telehealth would be a niche market, albeit a $43 billion niche market, focused largely on behavioral health and occasionally on primacy care, with additional use cases available thanks to a tech-savvy physician group here, a willing payer there, an innovative vendor over here, and a large employer over there. It might integrate with the EHR, or it might not – but since it’s not really being used for high-acuity care or specialty care all that much, there really isn’t all that much missing from the patient record at the end of the day. It would probably continue to drive inequity in care, at least initially, though continued investment in technology infrastructure could combat that to a certain degree.

It would be a fine ending because, for once, we’d actually know where telehealth stood. Before the pandemic, writers like me put out stories every year with the theme “This is finally the year for telehealth to take off!” Analysts and consultants would crunch numbers and grossly exaggerate telehealth’s projected total impact on the industry. (If you’d have projected a market cap of $12 jillion for telehealth as it surpassed eleventeen percent of all visits, you honestly wouldn’t have been that far off.) Vendors would claim their total addressable market was every American with a smartphone with no regard for the need to narrow the digital divide before things like continuous remote monitoring or synchronous visits would be possible.

Now that healthcare first had no choice but to embrace telehealth to survive and then returned to in-person visits in all cases but behavioral health, we know what telehealth represents. We know the limits it faces broadly in fee-for-service medicine and specifically in so many types of specialty care. We know that Wall Street is a lot less bullish on telehealth than it once was. It’s like when your favorite baseball team begins the season with promise but wakes up on May 1 in last place with a 6-20 record. We know exactly where we stand, whether we like it or not.

The story doesn’t end here, though. There are a few important reasons why.

One is the demonstrated impact on clinical and financial outcomes. An Epic Research evaluation of nearly 19 million telehealth visits to primary care found that 61% of visits didn’t require an in-person follow-up within the next 90 days. A second paper, which got a lot of press when it was released last year, found that telehealth is as good or better than in-person care on 13 of 16 HEDIS measures (Health Care Effectiveness Data and Information Set). One paper even showed that remote monitoring improved blood pressure monitoring “despite a nationally observed disruption of traditional hypertension care” during the pandemic. In other words, telehealth is quite effective when it’s done right.

The second reason is that telehealth in behavioral health has shown the industry what can be possible. There are startup CEOs, healthcare executives, and even physician champions looking at behavioral health, with 54% of all visits being done virtually and a 60% share of all telehealth claims, and wondering why their specialty of choice can’t do better than a handful of visits here and there. Arguably, no one else will achieve such lofty numbers, to be sure, but even doubling the number of virtual visits in any given specialty will represent significant progress – and begin to provide evidence to contrarians simply convinced that virtual care cannot work in their specialty. At some point, the other shoe will drop.

Plus, at the risk of sounding cliché, patients will start to come to expect it. Anyone who frequently sees a behavioral health professional virtually will start to wonder why every other specialist demands an in-person visit. Anyone who has had fairly seamless virtual visit experiences – whether for check-ins during the pandemic or for behavioral health appointments using purpose-built telehealth products – will ask why the experience is so much more clunky everywhere else in the hospital. Even those who understand the complexities of managing their chronic condition will question why they must go to the office to review numbers that both they patient and their provider can see in the same database when they can talk to a behavioral health provider from their couch.

Finally, the concept of the “digital front door” doesn’t seem to want to go away. Vendors continue to push it, and health systems continue to invest in it. Even with telehealth utilization at less than 6% and market share at 1%, they’re scared of losing patients to entities that do telehealth better – whether it’s the standalone app advertising discount visits on the subway, the service available through the region’s largest employer at no cost to employees, or the payer that knows that getting more members to use telehealth gives it leverage come contract negotiation time. Even with executives touting the value of personal relationships with physicians and the wonderful amenities in their new brick-and-mortar facilities, they’re scared that a digital front door that only opens partway will be the end of their business, especially if patients say there’s no discernable difference to the patient experience when they use virtual care.

Now what? It pays to choose widely

So what, pray tell, can the industry do as it faces its day of reckoning with telehealth? How should the industry move forward knowing that utilization is basically flat but demand exists in pockets here and there – that opportunities for expansion are paradoxically both constrained and yet available under the right circumstances? Well, it’s complicated.

Under current reimbursement and care delivery models, point solutions will have a rough go unless they serve 1) behavioral health or 2) a specialty that has seen demonstrated improvement to clinical and financial outcomes in value-based care models. In the second case, vendors may need to set their sights on specialty physician groups, as the business case will be easier to make for these stakeholders than for large health systems hosting dozens of specialties. The one exception here may be post-natal / early childhood care; since many state Medicaid programs are extending coverage for the first 12 months or more of a child’s life, we can expect a corresponding push for broader care coordination and a small but significant role for telehealth under such a new care model.

Along the same lines, any new value-based care model – whether designed by Medicare, Medicaid, or commercial insurers – should consider telehealth from the perspective of the utilization threshold that can be reasonably expected for a given specialty. Obviously, some specialties are literally more hands-on than others; care pathways, treatment plans, and patient engagement approaches also differ tremendously. Figuring out where and when encounters can be handled virtually will require significant work, but I think it’s imperative to get that right before any sort of value-based specialty care model is put in place. Otherwise, the Powers That Be could easily be seen as imposing their will on providers who either feel they’re being asked to use telehealth when it doesn’t make sense or are given a bar that’s so low that they only need to see a handful of patients virtually a handful of times to hit the mark.

Meanwhile, health systems need to look long and hard at telehealth’s role in their near-term business strategy. I know that’s not exactly groundbreaking advice, but leadership needs to decide if they’re comfortable with sticking to telehealth for behavioral health (and possibly primary care or urgent care) for the time being, or if they feel the need to broaden their horizons in the face of unforeseen competition. If it’s the latter, where’s the greatest danger to their business, and does it make sense to invest time, resources, energy, and attention into rolling out technology that will apply to roughly 6% of visits and 1% of revenue?

It’s an unenviable Catch-22. Most health systems likely have to spend money to make money on telehealth, and they don’t have much to spend given the many financial pressures they face – but those retail, pharmacy, and digital health competitors do. These circumstances only put pressure on health systems to act quickly, which has never been their preferred approach to telehealth adoption, what with so many purpose-built applications serving one business unit within one building and never scaling much beyond that.

Those types of solutions proliferate because, up until March 2020, that was the best way for most vendors to get in the door: Present a compelling use case tied to a specific clinical outcome for a given population, get buy-in, and work alongside provider staff to get the ball rolling. It’s hard to blame vendors for taking that approach, especially when large platforms have struggled to integrate both technology and service offerings – and when, stop me if I sound like a broken record, it’s worked so well in behavioral health.

At the same time, the integrated platform appears to be the more pragmatic path forward. It gives patients a more unified experience (especially if they must navigate multiple specialties), it lets health systems deploy to new specialties without custom development, and (implemented properly) it gives point solutions something to plug into so they aren’t lost in the shuffle (and a partner that can help them scale – or that can acquire them, if that’s the end goal).

I wish there was an answer to the “Now what?” question beyond “Think before you leap.” (I know if I were paying a consultant, and they came up with that after months of work, I’d be none too pleased…) At the same time, every healthcare stakeholder is looking at telehealth for different reasons both now and in the future, so I don’t think a specific piece of advice is going to apply.

However, I do think that looking at the evidence presented here of where and how telehealth utilization has stuck, and coupling that with business priorities, will help steer organizations toward a better decision. It won’t result in enterprise-wide deployment or a sudden digital transformation, but it also won’t leave leadership in a position where they feel they have no choice but to spin the wheel and hope for the best.