Telemedicine Bill Restricting Abortion Practices Approved in Senate

Senators have approved a House bill that clarifies the state’s telemedicine laws, but also creates a new restriction for certain treatments.

House Bill 2509 makes it clear that doctors can treat certain diseases in minors or adults who are still enrolled in public school. 

Those diseases include psychiatric disorders, attention deficit disorder, and intellectual and developmental disabilities.

“That was apparently something that had been going on before we passed the bill last year,” senate Judiciary Chair Charles Trump said Tuesday, “and our bill threw the continuation of some of those programs into jeopardy, so this will fix that.”

The bill, however, was also amended in the Senate to exclude another healthcare practice.

“It says a physician or healthcare provider may not prescribe any drug with the intent of causing an abortion,” Trump explained to his fellow Senators during a floor sesison.

The two step abortion pill is becoming a more common way to end pregnancies in the first ten weeks.

The bill was approved on a 34 to zero vote. 

Delegates Pass Telemedicine Bill to Help Rural Areas

Delegates have approved a bill that its sponsors hope will expand access to mental and behavioral health medications.

House Bill 2509 allows physicians to prescribe certain controlled substances through telemedicine technologies – like over a video call. Doctors are currently prohibited from prescribing certain types of medications over telemedicine systems, including narcotics like oxycodone and morphine—drugs that have been abused in recent years in the state.

Cabell County Delegate Matthew Rohrbach says while curbing the state’s opioid epidemic is a major focus for lawmakers, this specific bill does not affect those efforts. It still prohibits doctors from prescribing opioids, but would allow prescriptions for behavioral or mental health issues.

“We have a tremendous problem with access to mental health providers, particularly for our pediatric population,” Rohrbach explained, “So, ADHD is the main thing that this is gonna seek to close, so kids that have ADHD can be treated via telehealth to get their aderol and other prescriptions for such, so this is not to allow pill mills; this is really to extend for our mental health providers a way to service our clients in rural areas.”

House bill 2509 passed 95 to 4 Monday. It now heads to the Senate for further consideration.

Lack of Broadband Hinders Telemedicine in Rural Areas

Telemedicine has been touted as a way to fill in some gaps in health care for rural residents.  But telemedicine relies on broadband service, which parts of Appalachia still don’t have.

“Without broadband, you don’t have telemedicine,” said nurse practitioner Lindsey Kennedy. Kennedy manages the telemedicine program at Bland County Medical Center in southwestern Virginia.  

The clinic is located at that tip of Virginia that curves down between West Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee and Kentucky. Kennedy said patients from all of those states utilize the clinic’s telemedicine services.  

The Bland clinic is a federally qualified health center, which means that many of the clinic’s patients are uninsured or underinsured. Without telemedicine, patients needing specialty care have to drive to a hospital that offers financial assistance, which could be hours away.

“But it’s just not feasible for our patients to drive that far and to provide the finances for transportation and the time for that,” said Kennedy.

Telemedicine offers a way to bridge that gap. People drive to the clinic, which is centrally located, and then have consults with doctors at the University of Virginia Medical Center in Charlottesville.

“I think there’s been a clear communication in this country that rural people need access to resources,” said David G. Cattell, director of telemedicine for UVA. UVA works with 150 rural clinics like the one in Bland County. West Virginia University also has a telemedicine program as does the University of Kentucky.

However, much of the region lacks adequate broadband access, which is defined as download speeds of 25 megabits per second and upload speeds of 3 megabits per second. Even in areas that have some access to broadband, like the Bland Clinic, it isn’t always enough.  

“We are working with Carillion to do cardiology clinics,” said Kennedy, “because a lot of our patients have heart attacks. They’re flown out to Roanoke and are expected to follow up in Roanoke,… [but] a two hour drive for a 90-year-old, elderly woman is not feasible.”

The clinic had to add an additional IP address to be able to electronically connect to the hospital system. But there’s only one internet provider in Bland, and they weren’t in rush to get the project done.

Installation “took six months. It was something that could have been done in a day,” she said.  “But because we only have the one carrier in the area, they took their time with it. …They knew we didn’t have anyone else to go to.”

Now UVA is expanding telemedicine into the local school system, yet Kennedy said everyone’s pretty nervous about whether the school’s internet will be fast enough to manage the task.

“I mean a lot of people don’t think about it, but that’s your fundamental for telemedicine – you have to have that connection so you have that flawless face-to-face encounter,” she said.  

Telemedicine uses videoconferencing to create face-to-face encounters between a patient and provider – think Skype or Facetime on steroids.

“We have accessories that you can plug into…  If you have to listen to heart or lung sounds, they have a stethoscope you can plug in,” said Kennedy.”Then on my end, I’ll hold it up to the patient, just as if I was doing an assessment and on their end they’ll be able to hear those sounds.”

Recently the federal government has taken steps to expand broadband in rural America. In April, the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced grants of nearly $12 million to help establish broadband access in rural areas.

Some states, however, have declined to add their tax money to the cause. Last January, West Virginia legislators proposed a bill to create a $72 million state-run broadband network. But the bill was never put to a vote in the House in the absence of support from some Republican members.

Both Kennedy and Gordon-Cattell emphasize that without broadband you can’t have telemedicine.

“We as a nation need to commit to full-scale broadband. Broadband is that place where education, economic development and health are interdigitated,” said Gordon-Cattell.  

Gordon-Cattell said in the end rural broadband isn’t just about healthcare – although that’s desperately needed. He said broadband can bolster rural economies by helping rural hospitals stay open and creating technology jobs.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from the Benedum Foundation.

WVU Telepsychiatry Program Expands Services

West Virginia University’s Telepsychiatry Program received a $1.2 million grant this week from the Health Resources and Services Administration to expand telemedicine services in four West Virginia counties.

Through videoconferencing, psychiatric and pediatric specialists at WVU are able to provide behavioral health, obesity, diabetes, asthma and oral health services to underserved areas of West Virginia.

Currently, members of the WVU Telepsychiatry team serves thousands of residents in 17 West Virginia counties.

With the new money, the program will collaborate with rural school-based health centers in Barbour, McDowell and Pocahontas counties and a community-based organization, Power House, in Wyoming County.

According to a press release, school-based health clinics are “natural partners for telepsychiatry treatment, because they often serve as the hub of health care and social services for rural communities.”

The program hopes to improve detection of students at high risk for behavioral and mental health problems. It also aims to determine the prevalence of oral health issues, asthma, obesity and type 2 diabetes in students using the telepsychiatric consultation services.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from the Benedum Foundation.

More than $1M in Federal Funds Awarded For W.Va. Telemedicine Network

U.S. Senators Joe Manchin and Shelley Moore Capito announced Thursday that three West Virginia institutions will split over a million dollars in federal awards to establish a new telemedicine network in rural communities and schools.

Roane County School District and Pocahontas County Board of Education each will receive almost $500,000.

CAMC Health and Education and Research Institue is receiving almost $200,000. The money will be used to establish a new telemedicine network for rural schools and hospitals in central and southern West Virginia.

Telemedicine networks are increasing across the United States as a way for medical and educational experts to expand services to rural and undeserved communities.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from the Benedum Foundation.

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