- This members-only benefit offers something for everyone
- Take a strategic approach to Medicare Advantage records requests
- How to launch a successful career in optometry
- A voice for independent doctors
- Are you prepared?
- How to fill your staffing needs
- The latest on AI and optometry
- More courses, more uses, more impact: Why more AOA member doctors, staff are turning to AOA EyeLearn
- Master paraoptometric certification exam prep with AOA’s study resources
- 5 things every office needs to practice full-scope optometry
- Why thriving practices are prioritizing retirement plans
- What happened to the FTC’s noncompete ban?
- Keeping your practice (and finances) safe
- Is your exam chair ADA compliant?
- 2.9% Medicare cut, broadly panned, looms over 2025 as advocates press Congress
- How to navigate political conversations in your practice
- Making the grade
- Does your malpractice insurance provider measure up?
- The power of delegation
- New technologies shaping optometry’s future
- How AOAExcel makes your life easier
- Next-gen optometry’s focus on independent practice
- Inferiority complexity?
- Is your staff connected? How peer connections benefit practices
- Protecting patient privacy when a clinical observer visits
- Does your practice do in-house billing? Here’s something to know
- Where to start? The tools and resources to leave a positive impact on your patients and community
- AOA boosts support for optometrists rocked by Change Healthcare cyberattack
- Be aware of new classification of employee vs. independent contractor from labor department
- Why optometrists love the AOA Business Card
- Paraoptometric Month
- Patient intake coding for medical diagnoses
- Set your practice up for success
- New federal Corporate Transparency Act
- How to compete with online sellers
- CMS finalizes 2024 physician fee schedule: AOA’s 8 takeaways for optometry
- How do you measure success in your practice?
- 4 tips to elevate the profession and educate the public
- Now we’re talking: Communicating with the public
- Level up your optometric surgical team: AOA launches surgical assistant coursework
- 4 essential personal financial tools for optometrists
- Coding for orthoptic training
- New remote testing option for paraoptometric certification saves time, distance
- Testing 1, 2, 3 … paraoptometric exam handbook, resources for certification testing
- 6 things every hiring practice owner should include in a career center listing
- Now we’re talking: Patient communication
- AOA, leading schools organize to safeguard and expand optometry’s independence
- Co-managed care rife with success stories for patients, doctors
- 3 ways to grow careers and practices at Optometry’s Meeting® 2023
- Why disability insurance is crucial
- Now we’re talking: Interprofessional communication
- Build your practice and protect the planet
- You’ve been served—now what? Where ethical intersects legal
- DEA’s new opioid training mandate: What you need to know
- How to handle bad reviews and ratings
- How the updated position statement can help guide telemedicine in optometry
- 3 questions to ask your malpractice insurance agent
- Optometry’s ‘medical’ eye care opportunity a boon for patients, coordinated care
- AOA Antitrust Compliance Policy
- How the AOA Business Card can benefit your practice
- Combatting inflation
- How to earn an MBA while practicing
- AOA’s new Center for Independent Practice to amplify members-only resources for practice success
- Window Tinting
- The most important thing to know about retirement savings planning
- bolster your cybersecurity
- Identity Theft
- How the HIPAA Privacy Rule applies in a public health emergency
- Partners in care
- 4 tips for handling payer clawbacks: What the experts say
- When patients defect: A case study in emotional intelligence
- A career choice
- Be proactive: Identifying improper sales programs, financial incentives
- Scope of practice and malpractice insurance
- website ADA compliance
- Which retirement plan is right for you
- AOA practice success initiative can help with payer issues
- The most important questions to ask about disability insurance
- audio-only telehealth
- A case study in professionalism
- How to eliminate bias in the exam
- Keeping the practice’s mental health top of mind
- Managing expectations Telemedicines next step
- Optometrys Meeting Surgical Saturday
- 5 ways AOA membership can bring your practice success
- 6 ways to make a job posting pop
- The impact of paraoptometric certification
- AOA EyeLearn revamp improves accessibility of CE resource
- Good faith estimate requirement takes effect
- Optimize your student loan repayment strategy
- How to speak the universal language of care
- How to Obtain Hospital Privileges
- 4 common misconceptions about life insurance
- The privileges of providing care
- How team learning improves doctor-staff coordination
- Pandemic savings strategies
- doctor-patient-communication
- AOA 2021 Virtual Learning Livecast opens for registration
- Virtual interview tips for employers and applicants
- Paraoptometric Exam Materials & Certification
- Know your options
- Business transition tips for buying or selling
- The wrong patient communication plan could be costly
- New must have resource by AOA for MIPS providers
- AOA faults Ophthalmology journal MIPS study
- Doctors find lessons and success in applying for lifeline PPP loans
- AOA MORE takes yearlong pause
- New rules ahead for patient access to electronic health records
- 7 things to know to protect your future
- PPP Loan Tax Implications
- AOA offers CE-eligible webinar-paraoptometric certification
- 8 lessons the COVID-19 pandemic has taught us
- talking politics keep peace in the practice
- Selling your practice to a private equity firm
- paraoptometric certification
- Life Insurance Awareness Month
- Members support AOA during COVID-19
- VLL courses debut on AOA professional development hub
- Why back to school eye exams are crucial this year
- Protection check-in
- AOA 2020 Virtual Learning Livecast a success
- How to turn your patients into brand ambassadors
- Paraoptometrics have key role in scope expansion
- Communication key unlocking patients virus fear
- lessons from phase one reopening practices
- Report quality measures and MIPS data
- AOA offers guidance for post-COVID-19 reactivation
- How to reduce your carbon footprint
- federal loans ease pain of COVID-19 pandemic
- life insurance questions answered
- ethically providing telehealth services in your practice
- AOA surveys can benefit optometry
- Healthcare cybersecurity
- Doctor google web health-related inquiries can cloud care
- AOAExcel GPO Contact Lenses optical products
- How to get the most out of your AOA member benefits
- How AOA MORE can help you
- Co management 4 steps to success
- What doctors need to know about retirement savings
- Crafting a clickable job posting
- health information cyber attack
- Overtime pay labor law
- Service animals vs emotional support animals in the practice
- InfantSEE tips for children eye exams
- Medicare Beneficiary Identifiers and doctors of optometry
- Physician burnout EHR
- Flushing Hazardous Waste EPA
- Ethically incorporating telehealth-telemedicine services into your practice
- Transition Right
- Frequently asked questions about liability insurance
- How good doctors compete with bad companies
- National Life Insurance Day
- Team effort
- National Retirement Week
- How to become a bilingual practice
- Be a social whiz
- How to balance work and home life
- Physician burnout improving, still high comparatively
- What do patients think about the Open Payments program
- Paraoptometric certification can boost a career
- Doctor of optometry diabetes crusade
- How AOA membership helps protect your practice and the profession
- How to optimize diabetic care
- How to improve patient care and practice economics
- Pediatric Exams Kids Fears
- How to retire with confidence
- CMS ONC send message on faxs demise doctors put them on hold
- Data breaches cost insurers big but providers more frequently
- How to start a sports-vision practice
- 4 practice tips when disaster strikes
- Bad hires happen
- AOA MORE reports first patient data_helps MIPS providers attest
- Keeping up with Doctor Jones
- STEM academia no different Women face harassment
- The dos and donts of customer service
- Medicare repeals payment cap for therapy services
- Earned interest
- Optometrys bread and butter
- Disability Insurance
- Sustainable solutions-Focusing on a green future
- Ethics Disabilities
- Flu Epidemic
- CMS-Texting PHI among health care providers OK with caveats
- TaxTips
- AOA tools you need to succeed
- Keeping peace in the practice during the holidays
- Handle with care How to dismiss a patient
- Cybersecurity Awareness Month
- Dont let your nest egg lay an egg
- How to add a subspecialty to your practice
- Disaster Lessons
- 4 things to consider before volunteering
- Go green and save green
- server and protect
- AOA encourages members to protect themselves against cyberattacks
- Credit breach continues grip on doctors
- AOA cautions against email phishing scams
- AOA to CMS Significant changes needed to MIPS proposed structure
- Caution email phishing scam
- EBO Guidelines in Practice
- Aging Eyes
- Sunshine Act-Industry Reports
- the-best-defense-against-office-harassment
- Review practice policies on harassment
- Cybersecurity and Cyber Monday
- Medicare Part D drug costs
- tips to get more pediatric patients through your door
- Windows OS on Life Support
- 9 business solutions for doctors
- Tools of engagement enrolling staff as AOA associate members
- retinol ruses and root veggies-fantastic tale of carrots
- Practice changes can increase office efficiency
- On Employee Appreciation Day show your staff you care
- Data breach implications for tax season
- How to make the most of the media megaphone
- 6 types of photos to share on social media
- Holiday how to gifts goals and goodwill
- Credit freeze hinders PQRS feedback
- Considerations for a comanaged care strategy
- Whats your plan 4 tips for emergencies
- AOA US Postal Service raise awareness on eye health
- 3 solutions for noshow patients
- MACRA final rule offers flexibility
- In case of emergency
- 3 actions to help staff grow
- AOA tool helps solve social networking dilemmas
- AOA asks NBEO for assurances on data
- How to prevent theft
- How to fund a retirement program for your practice
- Not meeting attesting to MU Hardship exceptions available
- Malpractice insurance Ensure coverage even after retirement
- Does the white clinical coat matter to patients
- HIPAA Then and now
- Doctors of optometry can play a role in erasing health disparities
- Credit breach continues grip on doctors, students
- AOA member feedback impacts Medicare valuations for services
- How a strong doctor office manager relationship can grow your practice
- Share questions and comments in Ethics Forum
- Think About Your Eyes campaign continues to raise public awareness
- Be prepared for more patients requesting to access their health records
- Medicare Supplier Program Requires Fingerprint based Background Checks
- 4 ways to protect your patients and practice from cyberattacks
- When doctors become patients
- The benefits of a bilingual practice
- Harmed by contact lenses Report now
- Medicare Part D prescribing data offers insight
- AOA nets 2016 Medicare fee schedule wins
- 9 member benefits through AOAExcel
- Health centers to expand services with 500 million grants
- Doctors Are you covered
- Tax law change could impact doctors
- Why doctors of optometry should seek hospital privileges
- CMS issues EHR Incentive Programs final rule
- Cybersecurity Is your patient information practice protected
- Create a space for kids in your office
- Prepare for a shift in credit card fraud liability
- Significant policy change in post-op co-management
- How to go the distance
- Accommodate aging eyes in your practice
- CMS tests Medicare Advantage plan benefit designs
- Get your practice noticed online
- Protect your practice from copyright infringement
- New reports AOA members tally higher incomes
- Position your practice for aging eyes
- Survey Vision insurance sales increase
- 4 paths to practice protection
- Improving patient care with certified paraoptometric staff members
- How to successfully navigate Medicare Advantage plans
- AOA releases directory of accountable care organizations
Keeping the 'medicine' in telemedicine
June 23, 2021
COVID-19 accelerated telemedicine’s years-long sprawl in health care, and now experts ponder whether telemedicine’s emergency expansion can be rolled back—or if it’s solidified its place in the new normal. This raises the question: Where’s the line between technology as a tool for patient care and corporate profit?
Excerpted from page 36 of the March/April 2021 edition of AOA Focus.
Informal consults are nothing out of the ordinary for doctors: family and friends calling for off-the-cuff opinions on benign subjects. But when the father of his daughter’s friend texted Chris Wolfe, O.D., a picture of her newly developed internal hordeolum, the stakes were a bit different.
Normally, an office visit would be warranted, but this was early in the #FlattenTheCurve months of the global coronavirus pandemic with stay-home orders in place and Dr. Wolfe, like other doctors of optometry, was limited to emergency eye care. So, to ensure the girl wasn’t subjecting herself to unnecessary infectious risk at an urgent care or emergency department, Dr. Wolfe suggested an option perfect for this unique situation—a remote consult.
“Sure enough, she ended up with her entire eyelid swollen so we jumped on a call to determine the best options with oral medications,” Dr. Wolfe says. “After a couple days and another follow-up, things resolved, and she turned out just fine. We got her scheduled back for an in-person, comprehensive eye exam for several weeks later when everything opened back up.”
The situation casts a stark contrast on what might have happened had telemedicine not been at Dr. Wolfe’s disposal, namely the family resorting to a general “teledoc” appointment with a non-eye-care specialist or upping their risk at a clinic. Dr. Wolfe says it just goes to show the power of having an established, trusted, doctor-patient relationship.
“If you participate in telehealth services with a patient who is your patient, there is no reason for that patient to consult an urgent care or establish new care elsewhere for their eye disease,” Dr. Wolfe says. “In my opinion, there’s no reason for them to see someone they don’t know.”
Over a quarter of doctors of optometry reported using telemedicine services during the COVID-19 public health emergency, reinforced by temporary allowances that may have changed not only public payers’ but also private payers’ willingness to leverage telemedicine.
Like it or not, the pandemic accelerated technology’s adoption several years as Americans’ interactions became increasingly digital. In fact, a report from strategic management consulting firm, McKinsey & Company, found that the COVID-19 crisis accelerated digitization of customer and supply-chain interactions by 3-4 years; sped up the creation of digital offerings by 6-10 years; and, now, customers are three times more likely to say at least 80% of their customer interactions are fully digital in nature than they were before.
It’s no stretch to say that patient hesitancies toward telemedicine have started dissolving, too, revealing an opportunity for optometry to bolster its patient care toolkit while also carefully educating stakeholders about the appropriateness of such technology.
“Unfortunately, there are companies out there using the idea of ‘telehealth’ that’s confusing to the public in order to sell a product,” Dr. Wolfe says. “But when you’re utilizing telehealth as a continuum of care for your patient, that does place the patient at the center of health care decisions, and when you do that it’s easy to recognize.”
Telemedicine in COVID-19
Telemedicine, the exchange of medical information from one site to another through electronic communication to improve a patient’s health, is hardly anything new, but the sudden emergence of the pandemic prompted an emergency expansion of its utility criteria.
In March, while the AOA worked to ensure doctors of optometry were fully recognized as physicians in the nation’s COVID-19 response, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) broadened access to telemedicine services for Medicare beneficiaries in order to keep this at-risk population home. Under 1135 waiver authority, CMS suspended requirements that Medicare only pay for telemedicine on a limited basis (when beneficiaries live in a designated rural area), as well as clarified how these visits will be furnished and paid.
Although temporary—the 1135 waiver is to remain in place for the duration of the public health emergency—the expansion of telemedicine services is increasingly looked on with favorability as other payers looked to CMS’ example and similarly expanded or adjusted their policies. And in fact, CMS recently noted it will reevaluate care covered via telemedicine following the public health emergency; however, to truly eliminate the geographic limitations will take congressional action.
“There may be certain exceptions going forward, and I could be totally wrong, but I would be surprised to see that rolling back in a significant way,” says Dr. Wolfe, AOA State Government Relations Committee chair. “I think reimbursable telehealth is probably here to stay.”
Based on use alone, that would seem to be the case. Per a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR), telemedicine visits increased 154% (March 2020 vs. March 2019) for care and conditions other than COVID-19, likely indicative of the change in telemedicine policy and public health guidance. All told, some 1.62 million telemedicine encounters occurred in the first three months of 2020, or about a 50% increase from 2019.
The MMWR notes this “marked shift” in practice patterns would seem to have implications that extend far beyond the pandemic, and that continuing telemedicine policy changes and regulatory waivers “might provide increased access to acute, chronic, primary and specialty care.” Toward that end, health care advocates, such as the American Medical Association, avowed to actively support the continued expansion of telemedicine and infrastructure to support greater access to such services going forward.
True, the CDC data indicate a departure from the norm, but it doesn’t tell the whole story. After telemedicine visits peaked in April 2020 at roughly 70% of all U.S. ambulatory visits, such services declined to only 21% of total encounters by July as COVID-19 cases also declined, per an August 2020 study by Epic Health Research Network (EHRN). Although EHRN also identified regional differences in use—the Northeast is far more likely to use telemedicine than the South, the former decreasing only 25% off its peak-April volume vs. the latter’s 53% decrease—telemedicine visits were expected to rebound as COVID-19 cases surged at year’s end.
While the data might suggest patients’ caution and adherence to public health guidance, it also could suggest that patients seek options in how they access care. That being the case, the CMS’ decision to expand reimbursement and the increased use likely represent an inflection point for telemedicine adoption, says Kenneth Lawenda, O.D., AOA volunteer and an optometric regulatory specialist who’s served on three regulatory boards. In other words, there’s no going back now.
“Once you’ve gotten that genie out of that bottle, so to speak, it’s going to be hard putting it back in, so I do believe we’ll see an increase in telehealth going forward post-pandemic now that the CMS has accelerated it,” Dr. Lawenda says. “I think we’re at a point where we’re going in the right direction, but the profession has to be able to adapt, adjust and incorporate this into its regimen of care.”
That’s the key: overall, health care is becoming much more patient-centric. Patients demand more transparency in how they access care and greater input in how their care decisions are made; hence, the increasing reliance on technology, Dr. Lawenda argues. So, too, accessibility and convenience are fast becoming greater determinants in patients’ own decision-making.
However, there are clear pitfalls in letting convenience be the driving factor in patient care. Serving on regulatory boards, Dr. Lawenda knows full well how telemedicine is a delicate balance in accessibility and patient protection. There must be a way for patients to get care when and where they need it, without sacrificing the standard of care and risking patients’ health and safety.
“The profession is moving slowly and judiciously forward, and ultimately, the doctor-patient relationship has to be maintained,” Dr. Lawenda says. But outside actors also are seizing on this opportunity to subvert the doctor-patient relationship and home in on that convenience aspect, divorced of the continuum of care, to promote their own services or products.
Adds Dr. Lawenda: “Now, you’re going to have these competitive, for-profit companies that aren’t necessarily drivers of what will happen, but they serve to push and push. The AOA is pushing back in a good way because they’ve found that the claims these companies are making are false and the instruments they’re using haven’t been FDA-approved.”
Finding balance in technology
Technology, alone, isn’t disruptive. It’s about the application. Consider autorefraction in the 1970s or, now, visual fields on an iPad; technology that’s labeled “disruptive” yet incorporated directly into the doctor’s toolbox. But therein lies the rub: Technology is a useful tool and one that should be used to promote, enhance and protect—not supplant—the doctor-patient relationship.
Companies that play fast and loose with that line, think Visibly (formerly known as Opternative), purport to provide an online vision test to generate a contact lens prescription. Yet, the AOA repeatedly faulted the company for marketing its test as an exam, thereby further blurring patients’ understanding of what they are—and, more importantly, are not—receiving: a comprehensive eye examination. The AOA argued this separation of traditional refractory tests from a true, comprehensive eye exam seeded patients a false sense of security that their eye health needs were adequately addressed. Then, three years after the AOA first raised such safety concerns about Visibly, the Food and Drug Administration cited the vision test’s failure to gain formal authorization prior to marketing and issued a recall.
But Visibly, for instance, was clearly an attempt by a for-profit company to exploit the gray area in the public’s understanding of consumer technologies focused on users’ health and true telemedicine that promotes patient care. That space will only become more crowded as technology’s promise becomes reality.
“Technology should be a tool for the doctor as opposed to a replacement, something that provides data or information that should be consistently checked against a doctor’s own experience, observations and conclusions,” says Annabelle Storch, O.D., AOA New Technology Committee chair.
A patient is more than a single data point, she notes, with many factors relating to the patient’s life and circumstances that factor into the medical decision-making for appropriate diagnosis and treatment. That said, technology can bolster the doctor’s understanding of a disease state and inform the treatment plan. Continued innovation is only going to further hone technology into a tool that supports—not supplants—doctors’ input. Dr. Storch admonishes that the profession would be remiss not to make use of the technologies available but says finding that balance is critical.
“Adapting to the changing times is important, though in my opinion, we cannot lower or change the standard of care in the long term,” Dr. Storch says. “We are primary care practitioners, and we have a responsibility to our patients to find a way to maintain the standard of care that our patients deserve.”
AOA supports telemedicine in optometry
In 2020, the AOA’s Telehealth Council took these realities in mind as it gathered input from leaders and innovators within the eye and vision care field and wrote a new position statement that dictates the AOA’s stance on telemedicine, the criteria for ensuring its high-quality application, emerging legal and privacy considerations, as well as a reaffirmation of the in-person, comprehensive eye examination as optometry’s “gold standard” of care. The 2020 statement supplants a 2017 version and offers a more concise north star to how the AOA will approach developments in telemedicine—and it doesn’t mince words.
“The AOA supports the appropriate use of telemedicine in optometry to access high-value, high-quality eye, health and vision care,” the statement reads. “Telemedicine in optometry can serve to expand patient access to care, improve coordination of care, and enhance communication among all health care practitioners involved in the care of a patient. The AOA supports coverage of and fair and equitable reimbursement for telemedicine in optometry.”
Additionally, the statement emphasizes that one standard of care must remain constant regardless of whether services are provided in-person or remotely; telemedicine is appropriate to bolster doctors’ decision-making; and direct-to-patient eye or vision apps do not constitute telemedicine and cannot replace or replicate a comprehensive eye exam provided by a doctor, based on current technologies.
Importantly, the AOA believes a fundamental, doctor-patient relationship must be established and maintained, while “physicians must act as advocates on behalf of the patient and are obligated to discuss necessary and appropriate treatment alternatives, and in good faith to fully inform the patient of all treatment options.”
Christopher Quinn, O.D., AOA Telehealth Council chair, says the forward-looking changes included in the 2020 statement and approved by the AOA Board of Trustees fully acknowledge the evolving role of telemedicine provided by optometry.
“The policy carefully recognizes that care delivered remotely can improve immediate patient access in some circumstances, but that remote care can’t completely replace in-person care or deliver the gold standard, comprehensive eye examination,” Dr. Quinn says.
“The policy also carefully makes clear that a comprehensive eye examination can’t be deconstructed into components delivered separately, in whole or in part, and that attempts to do so are detrimental and deceiving to patients.”
As technology progresses, optometry can and should make the best use of the tools available to advance quality patient care.