Between 2019 and 2024, telehealth went from a curiosity to a cornerstone of American healthcare. For adults over 50, the shift is particularly significant: no driving to appointments during flu season, no sitting in a waiting room full of sick people, no taking half a day off for a 15-minute follow-up. Virtual visits now cover routine care, specialist consultations, chronic disease management, and mental health therapy — and Medicare covers most of it. But telehealth works best when you know how to use it. This guide covers what belongs on a screen versus what requires hands-on care, how to set up your technology, what Medicare actually pays for, and how to get the most out of every virtual appointment.
What Telehealth Can Handle
Telehealth is excellent for some things and completely wrong for others. Knowing the difference saves you time, money, and frustration. Here is a clear breakdown:
| Appropriate for Telehealth | Must Be In-Person |
|---|---|
| Medication refills and dosage adjustments | Physical exams requiring palpation or auscultation |
| Follow-ups for chronic conditions (diabetes, hypertension) | Blood draws and lab specimen collection |
| Mental health therapy and psychiatric evaluations | Imaging (X-rays, MRIs, CT scans, ultrasound) |
| Reviewing lab results and diagnostic reports | Skin biopsies and surgical procedures |
| Cold, flu, sinus, and UTI symptom evaluation | Cardiac stress tests and EKGs |
| Dermatology consultations (rashes, moles via photos) | Eye exams requiring dilation or pressure measurement |
| Nutritional counseling and diet planning | Joint injections, infusions, and IV treatments |
| Sleep issues and insomnia evaluation | Hearing tests requiring audiometry equipment |
| Post-surgical follow-ups (wound checks via camera) | Any emergency: chest pain, stroke symptoms, severe bleeding |
Getting Set Up
Technical problems are the number-one complaint about telehealth among adults over 50. These five steps, done once before your first appointment, eliminate nearly all of them.
Check Your Internet Speed
Go to speedtest.net on your computer or phone. You need at least 10 Mbps download and 3 Mbps upload for smooth video. Most home internet plans exceed this easily. If your speed is low, move closer to your Wi-Fi router or connect with an ethernet cable plugged directly into the router. If your internet is consistently under 5 Mbps, ask your provider about upgrading — or use your phone's cellular data, which typically provides sufficient speed for video.
Test Your Camera and Microphone
On a computer, open your camera app or go to webcamtests.com. Make sure you can see yourself clearly and that your voice registers. On a tablet or phone, open the front-facing camera and record a short video of yourself speaking, then play it back. If the audio is faint, use earbuds with a built-in microphone — they position the mic closer to your mouth and dramatically improve clarity.
Download the App
Many providers use platforms like MyChart, Doximity, or Zoom for Healthcare. Download the required app at least two days before your appointment so you have time to troubleshoot. Open it, log in, and make sure it loads properly. Some platforms offer a "test visit" or "check your connection" feature — use it.
Create Your Account and Enter Insurance
Most patient portals require your name, date of birth, insurance information, and a valid email address. Have your Medicare card (or supplemental insurance card) handy. Enter your pharmacy information so prescriptions can be sent electronically. Complete all of this before your first visit — fumbling with account setup eats into your appointment time.
Set Up Good Lighting
Face a window or place a lamp behind your screen, shining toward your face. If the light source is behind you, your doctor sees a dark silhouette. Your face needs to be well-lit so the provider can observe skin color, swelling, eye appearance, and other visual cues that inform diagnosis. Natural daylight from a window in front of you is ideal.
Medicare Telehealth Coverage
Medicare's telehealth policies changed dramatically during the pandemic, and most of those expansions are now permanent. Here is what you need to know as of 2026.
What Medicare Covers via Telehealth
- Office visits with your primary care physician (evaluation and management codes)
- Mental health services — individual therapy, group therapy, and psychiatric evaluations, permanently extended with no geographic restrictions
- Chronic care management for diabetes, COPD, heart failure, hypertension, and other ongoing conditions (monthly check-in visits)
- Specialist consultations including cardiology, endocrinology, rheumatology, and neurology when the specialist determines a physical exam is not needed
- Annual wellness visits — your yearly preventive health planning session can now be done via telehealth
- Speech therapy and certain occupational therapy evaluations
- Substance use disorder counseling and opioid treatment program visits
What Medicare Does NOT Cover via Telehealth
- Physical exams requiring hands-on assessment — Medicare requires at least one in-person visit per year for most ongoing conditions
- Blood draws, urine tests, and other specimen collection
- Imaging services — X-rays, MRI, CT scans, and ultrasound
- Procedures including injections, minor surgery, and wound care requiring debridement
- Certain initial specialist evaluations where the provider has never examined you (some require one in-person visit first)
Top Telehealth Platforms for Seniors
Not all telehealth platforms are equal. Some accept Medicare, some do not. Some connect you to a random available doctor, while others connect you to your doctor who knows your history. Here is how the major options compare:
| Platform | Cost (No Insurance) | Medicare Accepted | Avg. Wait Time | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Your Doctor's Portal (MyChart, Athena, etc.) | Standard office visit rate | Yes — billed same as in-person | Scheduled appointment | Continuity of care with your own provider and full medical records |
| Teladoc | $75 general / $299 specialist | Yes (select Medicare Advantage plans) | Under 10 min for urgent | After-hours urgent care, dermatology, mental health |
| MDLive | $82 general / $284 psychiatry | Yes (via Cigna and select plans) | Under 15 min | Primary care, psychiatry, dermatology |
| Amwell | $79 general / $279 specialist | Yes (select Advantage plans) | Under 10 min | Urgent care, therapy, nutrition counseling, chronic care |
Making the Most of Your Visit
A 2023 study in the Journal of General Internal Medicine found that patients who prepared for telehealth visits reported 34% higher satisfaction and received more thorough evaluations. Four preparation steps make a measurable difference:
Prepare a Symptoms List
Write down your symptoms in order of severity. Include when each started, what makes it better or worse, and whether you have experienced it before. Hand this to the doctor verbally at the start of the visit: "I have three things to discuss today." This prevents the conversation from going off-track and ensures nothing gets missed in a 15-minute window.
Have Your Medications Visible
Gather all your current medications — prescription bottles, over-the-counter drugs, vitamins, supplements — and place them near your camera. When asked, hold each bottle up to the screen. This is faster and more accurate than reading from a list and eliminates the common problem of misspelled drug names or incorrect dosages in the medical record.
Measure Vitals Before the Call
If you own a blood pressure cuff, pulse oximeter, or thermometer, take readings 15 minutes before the visit and write them down. Many conditions — hypertension, COPD, infections — require vital signs for proper assessment. A reliable home blood pressure cuff costs $25–$40 and pays for itself after a single visit where your doctor can make a treatment decision based on real data.
Write Down Your Questions
Telehealth visits tend to run shorter than in-person visits. Write your questions in priority order so the most important ones get addressed first. Questions worth asking every visit: "Are there side effects I should watch for?" "When should I follow up?" "Should any of my current medications be adjusted based on today's discussion?"
Mental Health via Telehealth
Mental health care is where telehealth has arguably made the biggest difference for older adults. Before 2020, Medicare only covered telehealth mental health visits for patients in designated rural areas who traveled to an approved originating site. That restriction is gone permanently.
What Is Available Now
- Individual therapy — cognitive behavioral therapy, talk therapy, grief counseling, and trauma processing with licensed psychologists, clinical social workers, and licensed professional counselors
- Psychiatry for medication management of depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, PTSD, and chronic insomnia
- Group therapy sessions conducted via video, including support groups for caregivers, bereavement, chronic illness adjustment, and life transitions
- Substance use disorder treatment — counseling and medication-assisted therapy (buprenorphine can now be prescribed via telehealth without a prior in-person visit)
The Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2023 made Medicare coverage of telehealth mental health services permanent, with one requirement: you must have an in-person visit with your mental health provider within the first six months of starting care, and at least one in-person visit every 12 months thereafter. This ensures your provider can conduct a thorough baseline assessment and maintain the therapeutic relationship.
For older adults dealing with isolation, depression after retirement, grief from losing a spouse, or anxiety about health decline, telehealth therapy removes two of the biggest barriers to getting help: transportation and stigma. You do not have to drive across town and sit in a therapist's waiting room. You can attend from the privacy of your own home, in comfortable clothes, with a cup of tea.
Privacy and Security
Telehealth visits are covered by the same HIPAA privacy rules as in-person visits. Your provider is legally required to use encrypted, HIPAA-compliant video platforms. However, the security of your end of the connection is your responsibility.
Protecting Yourself
- Use a private room. Close the door and let household members know you are in a medical appointment. This protects both your privacy and the quality of the visit.
- Avoid public Wi-Fi. Never conduct a telehealth visit from a coffee shop, library, or hotel using their open network. Use your home Wi-Fi or cellular data exclusively.
- Keep software updated. Outdated operating systems have security vulnerabilities that hackers exploit. Make sure your phone, tablet, or computer is running the latest software updates.
- Use a strong, unique password on your patient portal account. Do not reuse passwords from other websites or use easily guessed combinations like your birthdate.
The Bottom Line
Telehealth is not a replacement for all in-person medical care, and it should not be treated as one. It is a powerful complement that eliminates unnecessary travel, reduces exposure to illness in waiting rooms, and makes routine care dramatically more convenient. For chronic disease management, mental health therapy, medication adjustments, and follow-up visits, telehealth often delivers equal or better outcomes than in-person care — with less time, less cost, and less hassle.
The key is preparation. Test your technology once before your first appointment. Keep your medications within reach of the camera. Write your questions down beforehand in priority order. And use your own doctor's patient portal first, reserving on-demand platforms for after-hours needs. Medicare covers the vast majority of telehealth visits at the same rate as in-person care, with typical copays of $0–$20. If you have not tried a virtual visit yet, schedule one for your next routine follow-up. You may never want to sit in a waiting room again.