A primary, well-established benefit of telehealth is that it removes geographic barriers by enabling patients and clinicians to connect without needing to be in the same physical location. This expands access to care for people in rural or underserved areas, those with limited transportation, mobility challenges, or time constraints, and patients who need specialty services not available locally. Telehealth supports care delivery across distance for activities such as follow-up visits, chronic disease check-ins, behavioral health sessions, medication management, and post-discharge monitoring, helping patients receive timely care and reducing missed appointments.
While telehealth can also support collaboration (for example, specialist consults with local teams) and may contribute to better clinical decisions when it increases access to expertise or patient data, those outcomes are not as universally direct as the core access advantage. “Increases reimbursement” is not an inherent benefit of telehealth because reimbursement depends on payer policies, regulations, service type, and documentation requirements; in some contexts reimbursement may be equal, lower, or subject to restrictions. Therefore, the most consistently correct benefit among the options is the reduction of geographic barriers to healthcare access.
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