- Journalists Discuss Healthcare Costs’ Political Fallout, Concerns About Canceled ICE Facility
- Missouri hospital names interim chief administrative officer
- OSF taps foundation president
- Morgan Medical Center launches cardiology service line in Georgia
- The hospitals, health systems cutting jobs in 2026
- Nevada expands Medicaid dental benefits for adults
- 2 dead in Missouri hospital shooting
- New Mexico dentist fined $320K for violating Controlled Substances Act
- Ketamine: 5 notes for behavioral health leaders
- 60 statistics on hospital expenses in mid-2026
- Judge dismisses Stryker cyberattack lawsuit; plaintiffs could refile
- 42 hospitals closing departments or ending services
- Oklahoma surgeon completes world’s 1st knee procedures with Lantern ASC system
- The colonoscopy reimbursement cut GI ASCs didn’t see coming
- Aspen Dental to open Alabama office
- Anthropic’s biggest healthcare bets: 6 key moves
- Mental health admissions averaged $15.9K in total costs: 5 things to know
- DSOs target de novo practices: 7 updates
- 50+ dental executives on the move in the 1st half of 2026
- Gender ratio of nurse practitioners across 50 states
- Palomar Health, UC San Diego Health finalize JPA, form new system
- 6 DSOs making headlines
- 7 new psychiatric residency programs to know
- The ASC cost crisis, by specialty
- US Heart and Vascular expands network with 2 cardiology practice partnerships
- The states losing anesthesiology residents fastest
- 5 mergers, acquisitions in June
- South Carolina behavioral health agency cuts 47 filled positions
- U of Rochester Medical center taps GI surgery chief
- DEA moves to schedule synthetic kratom compound
- The newest weapon against insurer nonpayment — and its growing controversy
- CMS wants power to remove ‘problematic’ physicians, ASCs from Medicare
- Physician practice owner to pay $1.5M to resolve false claims allegations
- 5 DSOs that dominated Q2
- FDA Lets 20 ZYN Nicotine Pouches Claim Lower Risk Than Cigarettes; Critics Warn Of Danger
- Ultra-Processed Foods Linked To Brain Differences In Young Children
- Prompt Responses From Mom Might Lower A Baby's Risk Of Childhood Mental Health Problems
- Rehab Program Helps Lift Long COVID 'Brain Fog'
- Why Are You Right- Or Left-Handed? Experiments Suggest Surprisingly Simple Explanation
- Rural Americans More Likely To View Cancer As A Death Sentence, Poll Finds
- He Dreamed Of Becoming A Physician Assistant. New Loan Rules May Thwart Him.
- New Disease Threats Follow Trump Administration’s Health Program Cuts
- HealthQ Special: Caregiving in the Sandwich Generation
- A Mom Said Infant Formula Killed Her Baby. The Manufacturer Closed the File.
- Author Health expands mental health, dementia care services
- PDS Health opened 5 de novo offices in June
- Heartland Dental added 6 de novo offices in June
- California’s school behavioral health reimbursement program stalls
- CMS mulls tougher Medicare enrollment rules to combat fraud as part of 2027 home health payment rule
- Tenpoint debuts cast of lively everyday objects to zoom in on blurry vision hassles in Yuvezzi ad
- CMS goes live with GLP-1 Bridge program for Part D beneficiaries
- New Connecticut law expands Yale psychedelic-assisted therapy pilot
- The missing piece in crisis care? A model that avoided 1,580 ED days
- FDA Scientists Warn Against Expanded Peptide Access As Kennedy Reshapes Advisory Panel
- Lonza expands partnership with US drugmaker, boosts capacity for ADCs
- Trump administration withholds funds from New York's Medicaid fraud unit
- Alcohol accounts for 74% of substance use inpatient stays: 4 things to know
- Sanofi unit in Ireland chided by FDA over manufacturing flubs linked to Altuviiio
- Regulatory tracker: FDA sets decision date for Sarepta's DMD drugs
- Can A Popular Muscle Supplement Help Treat Depression?
- Zelis rolls out AI solution to help payers navigate No Surprises Act dispute process
- BridgeBio attracts $1B in equity for new launches, but analyst smells M&A ‘dry powder’
- Melatonin Shows Promise As Safe, Cheap Painkiller, Review Concludes
- Heat Dome Coming: Tips To Stay Safe During Extreme Temps
- Diets That Lower Inflammation Might Cut Dementia Risk, Study Indicates
- Vitamins Might Be Key To Asthma Control In Children, Adults
- Kimball lays out $103M to bolster life sciences CDMO footprint across Europe, India
- Haleon teams up with Microsoft in 5-year AI pact to upgrade consumer health operations
- ACCESS Model: behavioral health edition
- Would Hunters Take A Lyme Disease Vaccine? We Asked
- Affordable Healthcare Emerges as a Voter Priority in Purple Nevada
- Newsom Vowed To Transform Kids’ Mental Health. Many California Schools Are Still Waiting.
- Plus Therapeutics rebrands as Cerenome as it deepens AI strategy
- Orca Bio makes a splash with FDA approval for cell therapy Tregzi. Could an IPO come next?
- Remarks at the Economic Club of New York
- Evernorth unveils new AI-powered specialty pharmacy program, Pharmacy Forward
- 26 states sue CMS over final Medicaid work requirements rule
- Startup Queue lands $12.6M to launch autonomous robotic pharmacy kiosks
- Carbon Health agrees to revise contracts with its California clinics, pay penalties
- Experity acquires Exdion Healthcare to accelerate on-demand care RCM automation
- AstraZeneca agrees to pay $34M to settle 'free nurses' kickback lawsuit from Texas
- From Caffeine To 'Healthy' Labeling, FDA Sets Year-End Agenda For US Food Supply
- A 40-Year-Old Law Requires ERs To Treat Everyone — Unless They Opt Out
- Major Study Supports Same-Day COVID-19 and Flu Vaccination
- American Hospital Association names Steve Walsh as next CEO
- Medical journal retracts Tavneos pivotal study article, complicating Amgen’s defense effort
- Hyro rolls out analytics platform to glean insights from AI agent interactions
- Women With Parkinson's More Likely To Have Brain Changes Related To Alzheimer's
- Even Mild Weather Changes Impact Mental Health
- Breastfeeding Might Lower ADHD Risk, Study Finds
- After monotherapy failure, AbbVie and Genmab tout Epkinly combo win in DLBCL
- FDA selects Lilly, Regeneron, Fujifilm, 4 others for PreCheck Pilot Program
- She Struggled To Get A Lifesaving Drug Even After Insurers Vowed To Help
- Trouble Getting Weight Loss Drugs Covered By Insurance? Here's What To Know
- Would Hunters Take a Lyme Disease Vaccine? We Asked
- These Church Members Disagree on Politics. Together They’re Wiping Out Medical Debt.
- He Dreamed of Becoming a Physician Assistant. New Loan Rules May Thwart Him.
- Unicycive turned away by FDA again over manufacturer’s plant shortfalls
- Roche tops oncology reputation rankings as AstraZeneca climbs back to 2nd place
- Rising Stars: How Novo Nordisk’s Tara Sparks Went from Super Bowl Fan to Super Bowl Marketer
- Rural residents falling behind urban and suburban communities on medical, cancer screenings
- CMI Media Group bridges gaps in pharma marketing tech with newly launched Ad Astra platform
- How payers, drugmakers can collaborate to drive more outcomes-based contracts
- BeOne’s Brukinsa hits goal in mantle cell lymphoma confirmatory trial
- HRSA opens applications for $140M in rural health grant funding
- ACA marketplace enrollment down by 3M as of February, new federal data show
- Cases Of Rare But Dangerous Powassan Tick Virus Rising In U.S.
- Nearly 3 in 10 Young Adults Don't Have a Regular Doctor, Survey Finds
- Clinic network CEO pleads guilty to embezzling millions for 'social media influenced' market trading
- AI playing a major role in consumers' healthcare decision-making, survey finds
- Zymeworks acquires struggling Theravance for $929M
- Is Your Organization Ready to Govern AI in Regulatory Affairs?
- Klick bags Oxford PharmaGenesis in 3rd takeover in 18 months
- FDA rejects Sobi’s gout drug over manufacturing issues, sparing Amgen blockbuster
- Fertility Preservation Often Overlooked In Women's Cancer Care, Review Finds
- Sedatives Pose Fall Hazard For Recently Hospitalized Seniors
- Fourth Of July Poses Burn Hazards — Here's How To Protect Kids
- Efforts To End School Vaccine Mandates Hit A Wall In Florida
- A Dog's Stride Could Be An Early Sign Of Dementia, Study Says
- Florida Hospitals Act Fast To Discharge Gun Victims — Especially if They’re Not Insured
- Look out, Amgen. Here comes Viridian with FDA nod for TED med Lumvoa
- Doctronic, Simple HealthKit partner to connect at-home screening with AI-powered clinical care
- HHS announces new oversight measures for TEFCA, touts 1B health records exchanged
- Cancer Drug Shortage Renews Calls For Federal Action
- 3 in 10 adults turn to AI or social media for health advice, citing difficulties accessing and affording care
- Next-Generation Blood Test Improves Detection Of Aggressive Prostate Cancer
- Saint Peter’s Healthcare System Expands Intelligent Hospital Room Initiative with hellocare.ai to Advance AI Assisted Patient Safety and Virtual Care
- As PBM industry shifts, LucyRx and Abarca Health merge to build scale
- One Brooklyn Health Selects hellocare.ai to Advance AI-Powered Virtual Care Across Its Hospitals
- Most Patients Want Docs To Break Cancer News Directly, Not Through Portal Messaging
- Statins Rarely Cause Severe Muscle Problems, Researchers Say
- Even In Blue States, Hospitals Continue To Drop Gender-Affirming Care For Youths
- Younger U.S. Generations Increasingly Fear Adulthood, Study Says
- Opioid Settlement Money Pays For Services To Battle Addiction In Rural Kentucky
- Air Force Outbreak Grows As Military Reinstates Flu-Shot Rule For Recruits
- GLP-1 Weight-Loss Boom Linked To Surge In Poison Control Calls
- Brain Scans Improve Targeting Of Magnetic Stimulation For Depression
- Estrogen Birth Control May Protect Women’s Brains As They Age
- CMS Proposes TAVR Medicare Coverage is Potential Boost for Edwards Lifesciences
- Remarks to the US-CEE Connection: Transatlantic Challenges in Law, Business & Policy
- Statement Regarding Minimum Pricing Increments and Access Fee Caps
- Statement at the SEC Open Meeting on the Trade-Through Rule and Locked and Crossed Markets Provisions of Regulation NMS
- Disorder Protection Rule: Statement on the Proposed Amendments to Rule 611 and Other Provisions of Regulation NMS
- Statement on the Proposed Amendments to Regulation NMS
- This Old House: Improving and Remodeling Our Registered Offering and Filer Status Regimes
- Peirce Out: Remarks at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Capital Markets Summit
- Medtronic Advances Hugo Robotic Surgery Platform with Key FDA Filings and Product Approvals
- Medtronic Posts Strongest Revenue Growth in a Decade, Driven by Cardiovascular and Surgical Businesses
- Boston Scientific Plans Indiana Distribution Center, 300 New Jobs
- “Harmonization: We’ll Have Lots to Talk About”
Michigan healthcare freedom community forum
Possibly the only lasting benefit of the chaotic COVID-19 response is the rise of telehealth appointments between health care professionals and their patients. Probably the most interesting conclusion of this study is that policymakers should prioritize medical licensing reciprocity agreements with neighboring states and Florida to give patients continued access to telehealth care.
New report highlights how telehealth has transformed the access to care across Michigan
By Megan Craig, M.Sc. - July 21, 2023In just three years, millions of people across Michigan's two huge peninsulas have taken advantage of their newfound ability to connect with their doctors, nurses and therapists through a computer or phone, a new report shows.
Between 11% and 17% of all appointments to evaluate symptoms or discuss treatment now take place virtually, depending on the type of insurance, the analysis shows.
That's up from less than 1% of such visits before the COVID-19 pandemic suddenly spurred temporary flexibility in health insurance rules for telehealth, according to the report by a team from the University of Michigan Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation.
The team used insurance data to prepare the report for the Michigan Health Endowment Fund and the Ethel and James Flinn Foundation.
Their analysis shows how telehealth has especially helped the 1 in 5 Michiganders who have mental health care needs – most notably those who live in the 38 counties that have few or no behavioral health care providers.
It also reveals lags in telehealth's use by those living in rural areas, especially areas with lower percentages of homes with broadband Internet access. The team also examined telehealth across state lines, including by 'snowbirds' who split their time between Michigan and Florida.
Policy implications
Temporary telehealth rules will expire next year. So the report's authors make recommendations they hope policymakers and private health insurance companies will note as they plan telehealth coverage for the long-term.
"From the Upper Peninsula to Detroit, and everywhere in between, it's clear that Michiganders have embraced telehealth for the access and convenience it provides, as well as the original goal of reduced exposure to coronavirus," said Chad Elllimoottil, M.D., M.S., the U-M researcher and telehealth expert who led the team. "But the future of telehealth in our state and beyond will depend on the decisions policymakers and insurance leaders make in coming months, not just for coverage but also for expansion of Internet access and the supply of mental health providers."
Ellimoottil directs IHPI's Telehealth Research Incubator and serves as medical director of Virtual Care for the University of Michigan Medical Group, part of U-M's academic medical center called Michigan Medicine.
He worked on the report with researchers Ziwei Zhu, Xinwei Hi, Monica Van Til, who together analyzed data on traditional fee-for-service Medicare and some data from patients covered by private managed care plans from Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan, as well as with IHPI member Sarah Clark, M.P.H., who analyzed Medicaid data.
On August 10, Ellimoottil will speak about the findings and more at a webinar hosted by the Michigan Health Endowment Fund; information and a link for registration are here.
This report highlights how telehealth has transformed the way we think about access to care across Michigan, including dramatic shifts in the delivery of behavioral health care. We're excited for the valuable insights revealed in the data and the ways they will equip providers and policymakers to make informed, effective decisions that maximize the benefits of telehealth to expand access to care."
Becky Cienki, Director of Behavioral Health and Special Projects at the Michigan Health Endowment Fund
Key findings:
Telehealth visits by insurance source:
In all, 11% of visits by Medicare participants were done via telehealth in 2022, compared with 13% of Medicaid-covered visits and 17% of visits billed to private insurance. In addition, 10% of people with Medicare coverage who sought care at 'safety net' clinics were seen via telehealth.
The overall volume of outpatient visits by people covered by both traditional Medicare and private insurance remained steady from mid-2020 through the end of 2022, so Ellimoottil notes that this indicates telehealth substituted for appointments that would otherwise have been in person, rather than adding to the number of visits.
Rural vs. non-rural:
Before the pandemic, Medicare and other insurers had narrow requirements for telehealth, focused on people living in rural areas. But they could only get coverage for such visits if they left home and went to a local clinic to sign on.
The new study finds that in 2019, rural counties in central and northern Michigan had the highest rates of telehealth visits per 1,000 residents. But by 2020 and 2021, the counties with the highest rates of telehealth use were also the most populated counties, especially the five counties of southeast Michigan where nearly half of the state's population lives.
In all, about 31% of people living in rural counties had a telehealth visit, compared with 46% of those in non-rural counties. The authors note that continued coverage of telehealth from home, rather than reverting to access only from rural clinics, will be important.
Mental and behavioral health:
Telehealth has long been seen as a potential option for delivering care for mental health conditions and substance use disorders including drug and alcohol addiction, because it often doesn't require a "hands on" approach. Plus, patients often feel a stigma against seeking treatment in person, and there is both a shortage and uneven distribution of providers trained to care for patients with these conditions.
Telehealth use: The new report includes an analysis that confirms previous estimates that 1 in 5 people in Michigan have a mental health or behavioral health condition at any given time. Past studies have suggested that 40% of all adults with mental health conditions, and 80% of those with addiction issues, do not receive care.
The report shows that almost half of all visits for mental/behavioral health care now happen by telehealth among Michiganders covered by traditional Medicare, based on two different analyses.
They also determined which counties have patients receiving the most mental and behavioral health care. For people with Medicaid coverage living in these high-demand counties, the percentage having mental and behavioral health care visits by telehealth was much lower than it was for Medicare, at about 17% of such visits.
Provider shortage: The report also shows that half of all Michigan counties have less than 10 mental health specialists, defined as practicing specialists in psychiatry, geriatric psychiatry, neuropsychiatry, psychology, clinical psychology, licensed clinical social work, or addiction medicine. One in 5 Michigan counties have one or no such providers.
The team focused on 38 counties with the most dire shortages. In those counties, 57% of all visits with such providers took part via telehealth, for patients with traditional Medicare.
Getting help outside shortage counties: The researchers drilled further to look at the locations where patients lived compared with the location where their mental/behavioral health provider practiced, to see if the availability of telehealth was making it easier to get care from providers based in areas with a higher supply of providers.
In all, 82% of mental health visits by people living in counties with mental health provider shortages involved providers outside the patient's home county. Of those, the majority were conducted via telehealth – in fact, out-of-county telehealth made up 47% of all mental health visits for people living in these shortage counties.
In 13 counties, all mental/behavioral health visits by county residents were with providers in a different county.
These data show that telehealth meant greater access to mental health care for people living in areas that lack providers of such care.
Broadband Internet access:
The higher the percentage of households that have broadband Internet access in a county, the higher the use of telehealth by Medicare participants there.
The authors note that efforts to increase broadband availability statewide, but especially in the 29 counties that fall below the median level of broadband availability (82% of households), could increase the use of telehealth.
Demographics:
The researchers saw minimal differences in telehealth use along lines of age, gender, race/ethnicity, though women and people under age 65 were slightly more likely to use telehealth. Interestingly, they did see a higher rate of telehealth use among people who are eligible for both Medicaid because of low income and Medicare because of age or disability status; this "dual-eligible" population accounted for 23% of all telehealth users covered by traditional Medicare in 2020.
While the new report did not look at what percentage of telehealth visits were done through a telephone voice connection only, previous research by U-M teams suggests that discontinuation of insurance coverage for phone visits may reduce telehealth access for patients who are older, African-American, need an interpreter, rely on Medicaid, and/or live in areas with limited broadband access.
Snowbirds and other out-of-state telehealth:
The temporary pandemic rules that allowed patients to see providers who are located in a different state led to more appointments of this kind in Michigan. But the percentage of all telehealth visits by Michiganders with Medicare that involved out-of-state providers stayed the same at about 3%.
More than a quarter (28%) of all visits by Michiganders who saw a provider in another state virtually involved providers in Florida. These are likely Michigan "snowbirds" who spend part of their year in Florida and may have appointments with their providers there even when they're back in Michigan.
Most of the other visits with out-of-state providers involved providers in states that neighbor Michigan. Ellimoottil says this suggests that policymakers should prioritize medical licensing reciprocity agreements with neighboring states and Florida, to give patients continued access to this kind of care.
The biggest controversy I see here is over market share.
To be blunt: patients, clinicians, and healthcare facilities don't need a law to continue telehealth. The real drive is to see which telehealth systam can write its particular practices into law, establishing a monopoly. (Or at least force higher expenses on the competition.)
Get MHF Insights
News and tips for your healthcare freedom.
We never spam you. One-step unsubscribe.






















