On May 12, 2017, the Texas State Legislature passed SB 1107, a law expanding the use of telemedicine in the Lone Star State. The bill is now on its way to Governor Abbot’s desk where he is expected to sign it into law. Specifically, SB 1107 changes prior Texas law and now allows physicians in Texas to use telemedicine to establish a valid physician-patient relationship without the need for an in-person exam.
The change is the product of months of negotiations between various medical boards, regulatory agencies, and industry groups and may finally bring an end to the longtime telemedicine standoff in the Lone Star State.
Highlights of the new law include the following:
“Telemedicine medical services” is defined as health care services delivered by a Texas-licensed physician, or a health professional acting under the delegation and supervision of a Texas-licensed physician, and acting within the scope of the physician’s or health professional’s license, to a patient at a different physical location than the physician or health professional using telecommunications or information technology. The law also defines “telehealth service” as a health service, other than a telemedicine medical service, delivered by a health professional licensed, certified, or otherwise entitled to practice in Texas and acting within the scope of the health professional’s license, certification, or entitlement, to a patient at a different physical location than the health professional using telecommunications or information technology.
A physician may establish a valid doctor-patient relationship solely via telemedicine without the need for an in-person exam. Under the new law, a physician may provide services to, and establish a physician-patient relationship with, a Texas patient through the following telemedicine modalities:
The standard of care for a physician delivering care via telemedicine is the same standard of care as when delivering in-person services. The rule prohibits any other agency with regulatory authority over a health professional from adopting rules imposing a higher (i.e., more restrictive) standard of care for telemedicine services.
Note, rules on prescribing via telemedicine remain to be addressed in full. This is because the law requires the Texas Medical Board, Board of Nursing, Physician Assistant Board, and Board of Pharmacy, to jointly adopt rules and publish FAQ responses relating to defining valid prescriptions for telemedicine exams. Any such rule, however, must allow for telemedicine-based doctor-patient relationships. The law expressly prohibits the use of telemedicine to prescribe an abortifacient or any other drug or device that terminates a pregnancy.
Texas is among the majority of states to have enacted a telehealth commercial insurance coverage law. Texas’ coverage law prohibits a health plan from excluding a telemedicine service from coverage solely because the service is not provided through a face-to-face consultation. The new statute narrows the Texas coverage parity law by excluding coverage for a telemedicine or a telehealth service provided by only synchronous or asynchronous audio interaction or facsimile.
Every health plan must adopt and display its policies and payment practices for telemedicine services in a conspicuous manner on its website. This is designed to promote clarity in telehealth insurance coverage.
A physician providing telemedicine services to a patient must provide the patient with guidance on appropriate follow-up care.
Within 72 hours of the telemedicine encounter, if the patient consents and has a primary care physician, the telemedicine practitioner must provide the patient’s primary care physician with a medical record or other report containing an explanation of the treatment and the evaluation, analysis or diagnosis of the patient’s condition.
The statute clarifies that the provisions of the new law do not apply to mental health services.
Passage of this new legislation is welcome news for telemedicine companies and health care providers looking to offer telemedicine services in Texas. We will continue to monitor Texas for any rule changes that affect or improve telemedicine opportunities in the state.
For more information on telemedicine, telehealth, virtual care, and other health innovations, including the team, publications, and other materials, visit Foley’s Telemedicine and Virtual Care practice.