Should telehealth be permanently deregulated across state lines?
Access vs. state oversight.
Telehealth cross-state licensure deregulation remains a major unresolved policy question in 2025-2026, with Medicare telehealth flexibilities originally granted during COVID-19 repeatedly extended on a temporary basis rather than made permanent. A 43-day government shutdown in fall 2025 caused a roughly 24% drop in traditional Medicare telehealth visits over the first 17 days, highlighting the fragility of the current patchwork system. Congress has multiple competing bills pending — some extending flexibilities temporarily and others making them permanent — while state medical boards, federal agencies, and patient advocates remain divided on the right path forward.
Telehealth exploded during COVID when states waived their licensing borders — now that the emergency is over, should those walls go back up? The fight is really about whether a doctor's license should follow the patient or the state, and who pays the price when it goes wrong.
- American Telemedicine Association EDGE 2025 Conference reporting and Dr. Helen Hughes remarks (December 10, 2025)
- Johns Hopkins telehealth policy summit summary, Washington D.C. (May 2025)
- Continuing Appropriations Act of 2026, passed November 12, 2025
- CONNECT for Health Act — Sen. Schatz (D-HI) and 59 bipartisan cosponsors
- Telehealth Modernization Act of 2025 — Reps. Carter (R-GA) and Dingell (D-MI)
- Permanent Telehealth from Home Act — Reps. Buchanan (R-FL) and Thompson (D-CA)
- College Students Continuation of Mental Health Care Act — Reps. Flood, Bacon, and Nunn
- American Medical Association statement on IMLC and federal telehealth license proposals
- VA Anywhere to Anywhere program data (2018)
- CMS Medicare telehealth utilization data during 2025 government shutdown
- Federation of State Medical Boards — national telehealth registry proposal
- PSYPACT and IMLC compact documentation