Moving Forward
Resources
The Bright Futures: Guidelines for Health Supervision of Infants, Children, and Adolescents outlines considerations for adolescent health visits, including confidentiality, that providers can translate to the virtual space. Many of these considerations can apply to visits for SHS. See a preview of this resource here.
In August 2020, the Northeast Telehealth Resource Center published a roadmap and toolkit for implementing primary care and behavioral health services during the COVID-19 pandemic. This comprehensive tool begins with steps to evaluate the needs and feasibility of telehealth implementation. It takes users through implementing a care services plan, risk analysis, and cost and billing considerations. Access the roadmap here. Also in 2020, the American Medical Association (AMA) published a comprehensive Telehealth Implementation Playbook, which includes 12 detailed steps from identifying a need for telehealth and forming a team to evaluation and scaling of telehealth programs.
Voices for Georgia’s Children published an April 2020 report on school-based telehealth implementation with a specific focus on navigating common challenges to increase access to care. The report identified the main obstacles to school-based telehealth implementation: a lack of stakeholder understanding of telehealth and buy-in, difficulty engaging and sustaining relationships with health care providers or specialists, low program enrollment, and lack of adequate personnel to implement and manage the program. The report further explores identified challenges and offers solutions, workarounds, and best practices.
In April 2020, CDC published a Dear Colleague Letter outlining specific clinical recommendations and guidance on providing effective STD care and prevention when facility-based services and in-person patient-clinician contact is limited. In December 2020, CDC published an updated Treatment Guidelines for Gonococcal Infection, recommending a single 500 mg intramuscular dose of ceftriaxone for uncomplicated gonorrhea. Providers should administer treatment for coinfection with chlamydia with oral doxycycline (100 mg twice daily for seven days) when they cannot exclude a chlamydial infection. A May 2020 Dear Colleague Letter clarified Expedited Partner Therapy (EPT) vis-a-vis limited patient-clinician contact.
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, some states, such as Mississippi, extended school-based emergency telehealth coverage which made it possible for schools without school nurses or school-based clinics to access telehealth services. Read about the extension here. Medicaid Reimbursement for telemedicine services for children are made at the state level. A summary of states’ reimbursement policies can be found here.