Telemedicine Blog Strategy
Explain Telemedicine Clearly: Access, Modalities, Insurance, And State Differences
Patients and buyers want simple answers. Your blog can explain how to access care, what visit types are available, how insurance works, and what changes by state. No clinical procedures here — just clear, helpful information.
Access and eligibility
Start with the basics. Who can use your service, where it is available, and what a new patient needs before the first visit. Link to primary sources so readers can verify coverage rules and policy terms.
Simple checklist
- Location and age requirements
- Device and internet needs
- How to book and what to bring
Helpful resources
- Telehealth.HHS.gov for general guidance
- CMS Medicare telehealth for Medicare rules
- Medicaid telemedicine for Medicaid state links
Accessibility
- Interpreter services and captions
- Screen reader friendly forms
- Phone fallback if video fails
Modality guides
Explain each visit type in plain language with when it works best. No clinical procedures — focus on access and expectations.
Video visits
- What to expect, camera and lighting tips
- Privacy basics and where to sit
- When video is preferred over messaging
Phone visits
- Good for quick follow ups and simple questions
- What information to have ready
- When a video upgrade is needed
Messaging and async care
- Secure portal vs email
- Typical response times and boundaries
- Photo guidance for skin or device issues
For broadband considerations and device help, see your state and local resources and the FCC consumer guides.
Insurance basics
Coverage varies by program and plan. Give readers a clear route to check eligibility and costs, then link to the primary sources below.
What to explain
- What counts as a covered telehealth service for your audience
- Copays, deductibles, and out-of-network rules
- Any prior authorization or referral requirements
Where to verify
- Medicare telehealth overview
- Medicaid telemedicine with state links
- Plan documents from your insurer or employer
Sample cost table
| Visit type | In network | Out of network | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Video visit | Copay or coinsurance per plan | Higher cost or not covered | Check deductible status |
| Phone visit | Covered for many plans | Varies by plan | Ask about documentation needs |
| Messaging | Often covered when billed as async care | Varies by plan | Portal use is usually required |
State differences at a glance
Licensure and coverage rules differ by state. Keep your content evergreen by linking to state policy trackers and your own service area page.
Useful directories
- Center for Connected Health Policy — state policy
- Telehealth.HHS.gov — licensure basics
- State medical boards for provider licensure specifics
What to include on your page
- States you serve and modality limits
- Prescription and follow-up rules where applicable
- Links to external policy sources for verification
Routing table template
| State | Modality notes | Prescription notes | Where to verify |
|---|---|---|---|
| Example | Video and phone allowed | Follow state rules for e-prescribing | Link to board and policy tracker |
Always verify current rules on state and federal pages before publishing changes.
UX patterns for patient pages
Plain language
- Short paragraphs, concrete steps
- Glossary for terms like deductible and network
- Readable tables and checklists
Evidence and links
- Link to HHS telehealth and CMS Medicare
- Use payer documents for plan specifics
- Disclose when rules vary by state
Accessibility
- Captioned videos and image alt text
- Keyboard friendly forms
- Color contrast and large tap targets
Editorial calendar and topics
Quarterly cadence
- Access updates and device tips
- Modality explainers and when to use each
- Insurance basics and how to verify coverage
- State policy changes that affect your patients
Topic ideas
- How to get ready for a video visit
- When phone visits are a good fit
- What counts as a covered telehealth service
- How state rules can change your visit type
FAQ
Can we give medical advice on the blog
Keep it educational. Explain access and expectations. Direct clinical guidance belongs in a provider visit.
How often should we refresh insurance pages
Quarterly for program changes, plus ad hoc updates when a payer changes benefits or codes.
What if rules differ inside one state
Call out plan and network differences, then link to the payer documents and state resources for verification.
Do we need separate pages per state
Use one hub with a table and short state subpages when rules diverge. Keep the hub as the entry point.
