Cleveland Clinic also draws a lot of patients from out of state. Neurosurgeon Dr. Peter Rasmussen worries about how some will handle upcoming travel, especially because winter can bring icy weather.
A fall “literally could be life ending” for someone with a condition like Parkinson’s disease who has trouble walking, he said.
Psychiatrists have a different concern: Finding doctors for patients who move out of state. This is especially difficult for college students who temporarily leave home.
Most U.S. counties have no child and adolescent psychiatrists, noted Dr. Shabana Khan, chair of the American Psychiatric Association’s telepsychiatry committee.
“If we do try to transition patients, often there is no one there,” Khan said.
Helen Khuri’s mother found a specialist to help her when the 19-year-old’s post-traumatic stress disorder flared up last spring. But the Emory University student had to temporarily move from Atlanta to Boston for treatment, even though she never set foot inside the hospital offering it.
She rented an apartment with her father so she could be in the same state for telemedicine visits, a situation she deemed “ridiculous.”
“It didn’t necessarily make sense to … kind of uproot my life, just to receive this three-week treatment program,” Khuri said.
Even people seeing doctors close to home can be affected.
Dr. Ed Sepe’s Washington, D.C., pediatric practice has patients in Maryland who have started driving a few miles across the border into the city to connect by video. That saves them a 45-minute trip downtown for an in-person visit.
“It’s silly,” he said. “If you are under a doctor’s care, and you are in the U.S., it doesn’t make any sense to have geographic restrictions for telemedicine.”
Sepe noted that low-income families tend to be in jobs that don’t allow time off for in-person visits. Some also have a hard time getting transportation. Video visits were helping with these obstacles.
“It’s bigger than just telemedicine,” he said. “There’s a missed opportunity there to level the playing field.”
States can play an important role in telemedicine’s growth by guarding against fraud and protecting patient safety, according to Lisa Robin, an executive with the Federation of State Medical Boards.
But the federation also recommends that states loosen some telemedicine restrictions.
That includes permitting virtual follow-ups for someone who has traveled out of state to seek care or for people who temporarily move but want to stay with a doctor.
States could also form regional compacts with their neighbors to ease cross-border care, noted Dr. Ateev Mehrotra, a Harvard health policy professor who studies telemedicine.
“There’s so many ways that these issues can be addressed,” he said
In the meantime, patients who need care now are trying to figure out how to manage it.
Lucas Rounds isn’t sure how many visits he will make to see MacDonald in Boston to monitor his rare bone cancer. The 35-year-old Logan, Utah, resident already spent months away from home earlier this year, undergoing radiation and surgery.
Plus he has a wife and three young girls and expenses like a mortgage to consider.
Rounds says he has to think about taking care of his family “if the worst happens.”
“If I die from cancer, then all these expenses we’ve accrued … those are dollars that my family wouldn’t have,” he said.