Resources

Client Alerts, News Articles, Blog Posts, & Multimedia

Everything you need to know about BMD and the industry.

Telemedicine Flexibilities Extended to March 31, 2025

Client Alert

The passage of the American Relief Act, 2025 extends certain telehealth flexibilities through March 31, 2025. Telehealth flexibilities were implemented in response to the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency (PHE) seeking to expand access to care and reduce the risk of exposure to the virus.

Before the PHE, Medicare offered limited coverage for certain telehealth services for beneficiaries who lived far away from Medicare providers. Under Section 1834(m) of the Social Security Act, Medicare patients were covered for these services if they were seen at an approved originating site, such as a physician’s office or a hospital, that was located within a rural health professional shortage area, in a county that is not included in a Metropolitan Statistical Area, or from an entity that participates in a Federal telemedicine demonstration project approved by the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS).[1] The telehealth flexibilities granted during the PHE waived these geographic and originating site requirements[2], allowing providers to offer telehealth services to Medicare patients in their homes and other locations, and in other areas of the country.[3]

Without the passage of the American Relief Act, the Medicare telehealth coverage requirements were set to revert back to the original Medicare coverage criteria, which required the patient to be located at an approved originating site – which did not include the patient’s home. 

In addition to the removal of the geographic and originating site requirements, the flexibilities during the PHE expanded the list of practitioners who could provide these services[4], enhanced telehealth services for Federally qualified health centers and rural health clinics[5], delayed the in-person requirements for telehealth mental health services[6], allowed for audio-only telehealth services[7], and permitted the use of telehealth to conduct the required face-to-face encounter prior to recertification of eligibility for hospice care.[8]

While the PHE has ended, the expansion of telehealth services has been a positive development for both patients and providers. As a result, new legislation as part of the American Relief Act, 2025, extended the deadline from December 31, 2024 to March 31, 2025, which has been a welcome relief.  However, this is only a temporary fix and Congress will need to pass legislation to permanently implement these telehealth expansion rules.  

If you have any questions about the extension of telehealth flexibilities, please contact Vice President Amanda Waesch at alwaesch@bmdllc.com or Attorney Kate Crawford at khcrawford@bmdllc.com.

*The delay for in-person requirements for telehealth mental health services was extended from January 1, 2025 to April 1, 2025.


[1]  42 USCA § 1395m(m)(4)(C).

[2] 42 USCA § 1395m(m)(2)(B)(iii).

[3]  Making Telehealth Flexibilities Permanent: Legislation or Regulation?, American Hospital Association (June 2020), fact-sheet-making-telehealth-flexibilities-permanent-legislation-or-regulation.pdf.

[4] 42 USCA § 1395m(m)(4)(E).

[5] 42 USCA § 1395m(m)(8)(A).

[6] 42 USCA § 1395m(m)(7)(B)(i); 42 USCA § 1395m(o)(4)(B); 42 USCA § 1395m(y)(2).

[7]  42 USCA § 1395m(m)(9).

[8]  42 USCA § 1395f(a)(7)(D)(i)(II).


Will Student-Athlete Collectives Survive NIL Changes?

By July 2025 the landscape of student-athlete funding will look nothing like the current landscape, so preparing now is a must. If you are a student-athlete, the parent of a student-athlete, a university/college, or “booster”, it behooves you to understand these evolving issues.

Ohio's Recent Rule Changes to Administration of Immunizations, Outpatient Pharmacy Delivery, and Mobile Response Services

The Ohio Board of Pharmacy (“BOP”) and Ohio Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services (“OMHAS”) recently posted notices of Ohio Administrative Code rule changes related to the administration of immunizations (BOP), outpatient pharmacy delivery services (BOP), and mobile response and stabilization services (OMHAS).

HOA Construction Project Do’s and Don’ts

Local regulators can approve new construction, but if a resident contacts their homeowners association there may be trouble. Fences, yard alterations, and backyard decks do not have to be such a hassle and a point of conflict. Find out general Do’s and Don’ts to help HOA residents avoid issues in this article by BMD Partner Scott Heasley.

New Ohio Recovery Housing Rules Take Effect January 1, 2025

Ohio’s new recovery housing rules, effective January 1, 2025, require certified community behavioral health providers to refer clients only to accredited recovery housing residences listed on the statewide registry.

SCOTUS to Weigh In on Medicaid Beneficiaries’ Right to Choose their Provider

The U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments this spring on whether Medicaid beneficiaries have an enforceable right to choose their healthcare providers without state interference, as outlined in Section 1902(a)(23) of the Social Security Act. This case stems from a South Carolina petition challenging a Fourth Circuit ruling that blocked the state from terminating Planned Parenthood’s Medicaid provider agreement.