
Telehealth
Virtual Care
Everything You Need to Know About Using Telehealth for Virtual Care
Before Your First Telehealth Visit: What You Need
- A device with a camera and microphone, such as a smartphone, tablet, or computer. Some visits, especially asynchronous ones, don't require video at all.
- A reliable internet or data connection. Video visits use more bandwidth than a phone call, so a stable Wi-Fi or cellular connection matters more than the decalls itself.
- An acWi-Fi or intake link with the practice or platform you're visiting. This is usually where you'll complete a health questionnaire before the visit.
- A method of payment or insurance information, depending on whether the service is billed to insurance or paid directly (common for many direct-to-consumer telehealth brands).
- A private space to discuss health information candidly, even if the visit itself is asynchronous.
How to Use Telehealth, Step by Step
- Choose a service and start intake. Most platforms start with a digital questionnaire covering your symptoms, history, current medications, and consent. This is what allows the provider to prepare before ever speaking with you.
- Complete identity and insurance verification, if applicable. Some services require ID confirmation, especially before prescribing medication.
- Attend the visit, or wait for asynchronous review. Depending on the service, this is either a live video/audio call at a scheduled time, or a provider reviewing your submitted information without a live conversation, common for prescription renewals, certain chronic condition management, and many direct-to-consumer treatments.
- Receive your diagnosis or treatment plan. The provider documents findings and next steps directly in your record.
- Get your prescription, if one is needed. It's sent electronically to a pharmacy rather than handed to you on paper.
- Track fulfillment and follow-up. Many platforms let you check the status of a prescription shipment or message your provider with follow-up questions.
- Handle billing. Payment is processed either through insurance claims or directly, depending on the model, and is usually processed automatically once the visit is complete.
The Different Forms Telehealth Can Take
- Synchronous (live) visits real-time video or audio, closest to an in-person appointment, best for new evaluations or anything requiring back-and-forth discussion.
- In asynchronous care, you submit information, and a provider responds without a live call. Faster for routine needs like prescription refills, but not appropriate for urgent or complex symptoms.
- Remote patient monitoring, a connected device (blood pressure cuff, glucose monitor, wearable), sends ongoing readings to a provider, who can reach out if something looks off.
How to Prepare for a Better Visit
- Have your current medication list and dosages on hand, not just the names you remember.
- Note when symptoms started and anything that makes them better or worse. Providers can't observe this the way they might in person.
- If a device is involved (a camera for a skin concern, a home monitor reading), make sure the lighting or device placement is good before the visit, not during it.
- Have your pharmacy preference ready if you don't already have one on file.
After the Visit: Prescriptions, Follow-Ups, and Billing
Is Telehealth Private and Secure?
How Bask Health Makes Telehealth Simple to Use
References
- U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, Office for the Advancement of Telehealth. (n.d.). Telehealth.HHS.gov. https://telehealth.hhs.gov/
