This Policy Statement was revised. See https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2021-053129.
The use of telemedicine technologies by primary care pediatricians, pediatric medical subspecialists, and pediatric surgical specialists (henceforth referred to as “pediatric physicians”) has the potential to transform the practice of pediatrics. The purpose of this policy statement is to describe the expected and potential impact that telemedicine will have on pediatric physicians’ efforts to improve access and physician workforce shortages. The policy statement also describes how the American Academy of Pediatrics can advocate for its members and their patients to best use telemedicine technologies to improve access to care, provide more patient- and family-centered care, increase efficiencies in practice, enhance the quality of care, and address projected shortages in the clinical workforce. As the use of telemedicine increases, it is likely to impact health care access, quality, and education and costs of care. Telemedicine technologies, applied to the medical home and its collaborating providers, have the potential to improve current models of care by increasing communication among clinicians, resulting in more efficient, higher quality, and less expensive care. Such a model can serve as a platform for providing more continuous care, linking primary and specialty care to support management of the needs of complex patients. In addition, telemedicine technologies can be used to efficiently provide pediatric physicians working in remote locations with ongoing medical education, increasing their ability to care for more complex patients in their community, reducing the burdens of travel on patients and families, and supporting the medical home. On the other hand, telemedicine technologies used for episodic care by nonmedical home providers have the potential to disrupt continuity of care and to create redundancy and imprudent use of health care resources. Fragmentation should be avoided, and telemedicine, like all primary and specialty services, should be coordinated through the medical home.
Telemedicine is defined as the “the use of medical information exchanged from one site to another via electronic communications to improve a patient’s clinical health status.”1 The term “telemedicine” is typically limited to the use of these technologies when a provider delivers direct patient health services. The term “telehealth,” although often used interchangeably with telemedicine, is a broader term that includes telemedicine, as well as other health-related services using electronic information and communications technologies, such as health information sharing, health profession and patient education, and remote or mobile patient monitoring.
In pediatrics, telemedicine can be used by pediatric physicians in a variety of ways to deliver health services to children.2 The use of telemedicine is not typically considered a new or different type of care delivery; rather, telemedicine technologies are tools that can be used to deliver the same or enhanced care that is currently provided, only over a distance. Expanding the depth and breadth of the competency of the patient- and family-centered medical home is the result. Telemedicine is most commonly used to deliver subspecialty consultations, including mental and behavioral health, to children residing in rural communities; however, it can also be used when the geographic distance is relatively small. For example, it is common for infants, children, adolescents, and their families living in suburban and urban communities to face significant disparities in access and time-distance barriers, which could be partly alleviated by the use of telehealth. Although telemedicine technologies can be used to deliver care internationally as well, a discussion of international telemedicine is beyond the scope of this statement.
In this policy statement, the impact that the increased use of telemedicine technologies could have on the pediatric workforce is described and reviewed for each of the following capacities: patient access to care, physician capacity, quality of care, efficiencies, costs, graduate medical education (GME), continuing medical education (CME), payment/funding, research, and current barriers to telemedicine.
Patient Access to Care
There is significant disparity in the geographic distribution of pediatric physicians across the country, resulting in many underserved regions. Underserved communities are most commonly found in rural regions, but can include suburban and urban settings.3 This maldistribution of workforce results in differential access and is at least partly to blame for differential health outcomes between rural and nonrural populations, particularly for those children with special health care needs.4 The literature shows that access barriers related to distance can be partly addressed with the use of telemedicine technologies, which can also minimize burdens of parents and other caregivers missing work, children missing school, and costs and risks associated with travel.5,–9
Telemedicine technologies and consultations may afford primary care physicians and patients in geographically isolated communities a mechanism by which care coordination can be improved. In many circumstances, care can be delivered locally through a physician-led medical home under the leadership of a general pediatrician, subspecialty pediatrician, and/or pediatric surgical specialist located at a distant site. This interdisciplinary model of care can increase care provided in the primary care physician’s office in the patient’s local community, resulting in improved communication and coordination between providers, supporting the physician-led medical home, particularly for children with special health care needs.10,11 This model facilitates all pediatric patients having access to a pediatric physician.
The Use of Telemedicine To Increase Physician Capacity
The clinical benefits of using telemedicine technologies for consultations, case discussions, and ongoing clinical support in addition to the educational benefits of improved access to GME/CME can synergistically work to increase the expertise and efficiency of pediatric physicians. These benefits can result in pediatricians’ ability to provide care to more children and their families, increasing physician capacity.12,13 Particularly for medical subspecialists/surgical specialists, improvements in the referral process and communications with primary care providers have been shown to reduce the frequency of and demand for subspecialty consultations.14 Combining models of care that use telemedicine to facilitate care and educate primary care providers in the care of patients with special health care needs can result in improved adherence to evidence-based guidelines and clinical outcomes.13 The use of telemedicine technologies, such as remote patient monitoring and the use of telemedicine to reach high-risk or otherwise difficult to reach patients, can also increase the efficiency, and therefore the capacity, of their practice.6,12,15,–18 For example, school-based telemedicine programs have been shown to increase contact with children and adolescents not otherwise receiving primary care as well as provide an early means of evaluation and intervention for acutely ill patients, reducing the overall use of higher levels of care, including the emergency department.8,19
Telemedicine technologies can be used for multidisciplinary care, interspecialty rounds, scheduled case conferences, and case discussions. This approach, involving primary care physicians, nonphysician clinicians, and even patients and families (community training), can result in more efficient use of existing pediatric medical subspecialists and surgical specialists.17,20,21 Several clinical programs use telemedicine in these ways to increase both the overall number of patients cared for as well as the overall quality of care provided to patients with specific medical conditions.10,13
Quality of Care
A number of studies have documented that the use of telemedicine technologies can result in more appropriate utilization of health care services.9,22,–26 First, by increasing health care access for children, particularly for children living in rural communities, the use of telemedicine technologies can help reduce missed appointment rates, increase adherence to recommended therapies, and help ensure the appropriate frequency of recommended physician visits. Second, studies have shown that telemedicine can enhance both comfort and facility in managing specific medical subspecialty issues.13,27 Improved communication between the pediatric health care team and the patient has the potential to enhance disease management. Telemedicine technologies can also increase the overall quality and comprehensiveness of care delivered.28,29
Efficiencies of Care
The use of telemedicine technologies has the potential to increase efficiency surrounding care delivery. Previous research has revealed that the appropriateness of referrals to medical subspecialists/surgical specialists is increased and redundancies in evaluative and diagnostic studies are reduced when telemedicine is used.9,26,30,31 This situation may be particularly true for children, and especially children with special health care needs. The use of “eReferrals,” where primary care providers use a Web-based referral and consultation program to discuss a patient’s case with a medical subspecialist/surgical specialist before an in-person referral, is another means by which these technologies can be used to increase efficiencies of care. It goes without saying that evaluating and/or treating a patient via telemedicine likely represents the establishment of a physician-patient relationship that carries certain ethical and legal responsibilities. Indeed, clinical recommendations obtained via telemedicine technology should be incorporated into the pediatric physician’s health care decisions and documentation in the health care record, similar to those recommendations obtained through face-to-face contact. Analyses of eReferral programs have revealed increases in primary care provider knowledge and expertise with simultaneous reductions in the number of in-person referrals to medical subspecialists/surgical specialists.14 In this way, these technologies benefit primary care providers and pediatric medical subspecialists/surgical specialists, as well as the patients and parents, with a more effective and efficient referral process.
Costs of Care
Although the implementation of telemedicine technologies requires initial investments in equipment, telecommunications, and costs of technical and administrative personnel, a variety of cost analyses have found that models of care using telemedicine can result in long-term overall cost savings.30,32,–37 Savings can be realized by a reduction in the duplication of medical tests and examinations, a reduction in the utilization of higher-cost tertiary care centers, and an increased efficiency in referrals and communication. Beyond these savings, there are many societal benefits, including the reduction in travel and patient transport, a reduction in the hours of missed work by the parent/guardian, and a reduction in the frequency of missed school days.
GME and CME
The use of telemedicine technologies to provide GME and CME has been increasing for years. Interactive educational sessions can be shared by using live videoconferencing or live Web-based streaming. In addition, educational sessions can be recorded and stored for later viewing using the Internet. As a result, telemedicine technologies can make it easier for pediatric physicians to participate in or remotely attend educational sessions. In this way, easier access to GME and CME could increase the level of participation and education of providers.38,–40
Because of these benefits, topics related to telemedicine are increasingly becoming integrated into existing medical school and residency curricula, as well as CME programming, functioning not only as stand-alone topics but also as opportunities to enhance teaching of medical school and GME competencies. These topics include, but are not limited to, the adherence to professional practice standards, the preservation of the physician-patient relationship, and the confidentiality of patient information when transmitted through telehealth technologies.
Payment/Funding of Care
There is significant variability in how care provided by using telemedicine is financed. Policies vary between health plans, counties, and states for public and private payers of health care.41 The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has telemedicine payment policies for Medicare, but these are often perceived as very restrictive.42,43 Nonetheless, CMS has taken steps that would allow enhanced access to telemedicine services: a proposed rule released in December 2014 states that accountable care organizations (ACOs) have “flexibility to use telehealth services as they deem appropriate for their efforts to improve care and avoid unnecessary costs.”44
Policies regarding Medicaid payment for telemedicine are left to the states, and currently half of the states pay for subspecialty medical and surgical pediatrician telemedicine consultations using modifications to Current Procedural Terminology consultation codes and Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System codes.41 States enjoy tremendous flexibility when developing innovative payment methodologies for services that incorporate telemedicine technology. This flexibility, however, can cause confusion when care is being delivered across state lines. Payments from state Medicaid programs also differ for the various types of telemedicine services, including live video, store-and-forward, and remote patient monitoring. Private insurers typically follow state Medicaid payment policies with regard to telemedicine, but there is substantial variability.45 However, given the growing evidence that these technologies can improve satisfaction, increase quality of care and health outcomes, and reduce health care costs, states and payers are increasingly paying for telemedicine services.41,46,47
A variety of future funding models could incentivize the use of these technologies to treat underserved populations. For example, consistent with current federal and state efforts, financial incentives could be offered to pediatric physicians who are willing to provide telemedicine consultations to patients and providers living in medically underserved areas. There are also opportunities to provide financial incentives to support the use of telemedicine because of the evidence of increased patient-centered care. For example, some states have allowed the use of telemedicine technologies to be used to incentivize primary care offices to become certified by the National Committee for Quality Assurance as a patient-centered medical home (PCMH).15,48 When appropriate, incentives for implementation of telemedicine services should extend beyond tax credits and other, more traditional models to include loan forgiveness programs and technology investment grants. Demonstrated improvements in the medical home with simultaneous improvements in the availability of pediatric physicians would do much to improve the delivery of high-quality care in underserved areas and should be encouraged.
Payment changes are coming to health care, with “value based” care replacing “volume based” care. In light of these changes, it is likely that the use of telemedicine technologies will increase. Relatedly, many ACOs or other non-ACO health plans covering rural populations do not offer the spectrum of pediatric services required by the set of essential health benefits included in the Affordable Care Act.49 Telemedicine technologies may provide some solutions whereby pediatric physicians can be made available to these pediatric populations, although certainly not all ACOs will have the technological infrastructure to support telemedicine applications. Many ACOs and non-ACO health plans are incorporating pediatric physician services using telemedicine as a means of complying with the essential health benefits and supporting network adequacy.
The ability to secure federal incentives for telemedicine will be critical to furthering the growth in the remote delivery of pediatric health care services. An example of such financial incentives for telemedicine services could be a link to some of the Medicare and Medicaid programs’ most costly services, such as hospital readmissions and labor and pre- and postdelivery services. Pediatric physicians supported by these financial incentives could create innovative service delivery lines for existing and new patients, potentially improving access and outcomes, while providing more efficient and less costly care.
Supporting the PCMH
Telemedicine technologies and consultations, as stated previously, can increase care provided in the primary care physician’s office in the patient’s local community, resulting in improved communication and coordination between providers, supporting the physician-led PCMH model of care, particularly for children with special health care needs.15,48 Although quality telemedicine care promises to increase access to pediatric medical subspecialty and surgical specialty care for patients in underserved urban and rural areas, and at the same time curtail unnecessary emergency department and hospital care, this must be done in support of and integrated with the PCMH, not in place of it. The use of telemedicine care by virtual health care providers, such as those linked to retail-based clinics, entrepreneurs, or insurers whose business model is to provide health care services to patients via smart phone, laptop, or video-consult kiosk without a previous physician-patient relationship, previous medical history, or hands-on physical examination (other than what can be accessed via the technology), can undermine the basic principles of the PCMH model.
In isolation, the use of virtual telemedicine care represents the antithesis of the medical home model of quality pediatric care: care that is patient-centered, comprehensive, team-based, coordinated, accessible, and focused on quality and safety. Virtual health care services are provided episodically and are lacking the essentials of the patient’s medical record. Increasing fragmentation of care is the result, which leads to incomplete or redundant services and wastes health care dollars. More importantly, virtual telemedicine care in isolation does not provide timely and comprehensive follow-up with the patient and the medical home. Finally, it does not provide the same level of care that would be provided in a hands-on visit (eg, physical examination, necessary laboratory tests, etc), and therefore the patient receives suboptimal care. Although such novelty care appeals to parents because it can be faster, more convenient, and more affordable than an office visit, the loss of continuity of care, quality of care, and patient safety shows why this telemedicine care model should not be embraced.50,–52
Research on Telemedicine
A common weakness in evaluations of telemedicine has been the lack of clearly defined reference and control groups. The control should be the standard or level of care (or the communication/education standard) that would be provided in the absence of the telemedicine intervention. Telemedicine research comparisons have often relied on historical controls, which may only be sufficient if the prevailing conditions have not changed over time and if the relationship between usual care and the outcomes of interest has remained constant.
The published medical literature on telemedicine has been positive with regard to patient and parent satisfaction, provider satisfaction, feasibility, and the equivalence of telemedicine encounters to in-person encounters.53,54 However, these benefits have resulted from an ever-evolving portfolio of technologies and applications. Future evaluations of these tools must consider the impact of applications that may not have been foreseen during the initial design and application. In comparative studies involving telemedicine, the use of randomized designs is preferable and, to date, underutilized; it may be appropriate under certain circumstances to randomize one or more of patients, physicians, or delivery sites.55,–57
Current Barriers to Telemedicine
The implementation of telemedicine requires an initial financial investment in equipment, software, and telecommunications. There are often ongoing costs associated with maintenance of technology and personnel costs associated with training and technical support. These costs can represent a significant barrier for pediatric physicians and other clinicians who care for children. The underserved practices and locations most likely to benefit from telemedicine are probably those least likely to afford the initial financial investment or ongoing maintenance. However, these practices and locations often have existing relationships with distant academic pediatric medical centers to whom patients are referred for evaluation and care; many, if not most, offer telemedicine services.13,58
In addition, despite the increasing evidence and potential promise of how telemedicine technologies can help address some of the access, quality, and pediatric workforce issues faced by children, many current state and federal policies, including those addressing licensure and payment, create barriers for pediatric physicians. All physicians practicing intra- and interstate telemedicine must comply with state licensing and other practice rules in every state in which they practice, in person and via telemedicine.59 In addition, hospital- and practice-based credentialing and privileging policies often do not consider the delivery of care using telemedicine technologies. Not all states currently pay for telemedicine services or recognize CMS and Joint Commission rules on privileging by proxy for telemedicine providers.41,60
Another potential barrier with additional costs associated with care delivery with the use of telemedicine is related to malpractice insurance. Malpractice insurance most often covers in-person care and should cover care delivered to patients in remote health care facilities and possibly in other states. Physicians should review their current malpractice policy to be certain that the appropriate malpractice coverage that includes the treatment of patients using telemedicine is included.
In conclusion, the Committee on Pediatric Workforce maintains that when used appropriately, telemedicine can be used to connect patients to needed, yet otherwise inaccessible, high-quality care, and therefore supports the following.
Recommendations
The American Academy of Pediatrics and its chapters should advocate for the reduction in barriers to telemedicine to extend the reach of and the access to pediatric physicians as they strive to offer care for all children.
Physicians who deliver health care services through telemedicine, as well as referring clinicians and participating facilities, should receive equitable payment for their services to increase the availability of pediatric health care services for all children.
Use of telemedicine services for episodic care should be done within the context of the medical home, because such care offers continuity, efficiency, and the prudent use of health care resources. Fragmented care delivered outside the medical home model must be avoided.
Stable funding mechanisms should be developed by both public and private payers to support the continued development, expansion, and maintenance of telemedicine to improve patient access and quality of care and meet workforce needs.
Ongoing and future research, including demonstration projects, to study the effectiveness of telemedicine to address workforce needs, expand patient access to care, improve quality of care, reduce health care costs, and ensure patient/family and pediatric physician satisfaction, should be increased and financially supported.
Financial incentives (eg, tax credits, loan forgiveness programs, and technology investment grants) should be offered to physicians, practices, and health systems that can demonstrate an improvement in health care access and outcomes, administrative efficiency, cost reduction, and other performance indicators through the implementation of telemedicine and other technological innovations.
Providers of educational programming should be encouraged to use telemedicine technologies to provide education to remote members of the health care team and clinical sites, such as Area Health Education Centers and Rural Health Clinics.
Topics related to telemedicine, including ongoing quality assurance and training in the uses of such technologies, should be expeditiously integrated into existing medical school and residency curricula, as well as CME programming.
Regulatory and licensing authorities should partner with medical organizations and other health care stakeholders to overcome administrative, financial, and legislative barriers to implement telemedicine and expand patient access to health care.
Efforts to facilitate interstate licensure for the purpose of increasing accessibility of pediatric physicians to children living in underserved states and communities should be supported. State and local governments should develop appropriate licensing structures to support the practice of telemedicine across jurisdictions.
Lead Author
James P. Marcin, MD, MPH
Contributing Authors
Mary Ellen Rimsza, MD
William B. Moskowitz, MD
Committee on Pediatric Workforce, 2014–2015
Mary Ellen Rimsza, MD, Chairperson
Andrew J. Hotaling, MD
Mary E. Keown, MD
James P. Marcin, MD, MPH
William B. Moskowitz, MD
Ted D. Sigrest, MD
Harold K. Simon, MD, MBA
Past Committee Members
William T. Basco, MD
Liaisons
Christopher E. Harris, MD
Gail A. McGuinness, MD
Staff
Holly J. Mulvey, MA
Carrie L. Radabaugh, MPP
This document is copyrighted and is property of the American Academy of Pediatrics and its Board of Directors. All authors have filed conflict of interest statements with the American Academy of Pediatrics. Any conflicts have been resolved through a process approved by the Board of Directors. The American Academy of Pediatrics has neither solicited nor accepted any commercial involvement in the development of the content of this publication.
Policy statements from the American Academy of Pediatrics benefit from expertise and resources of liaisons and internal (American Academy of Pediatrics) and external reviewers. However, policy statements from the American Academy of Pediatrics may not reflect the views of the liaisons or the organizations or government agencies that they represent.
The guidance in this statement does not indicate an exclusive course of treatment or serve as a standard of medical care. Variations, taking into account individual circumstances, may be appropriate.
All policy statements from the American Academy of Pediatrics automatically expire 5 years after publication unless reaffirmed, revised, or retired at or before that time.
COMPANION PAPER: A companion to this article can be found on page e293, online at www.pediatrics.org/cgi/doi/10.1542/peds.2015-1517.
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