Remote Doctor

Choosing pediatric telehealth

What to look for, and the questions that matter for kids.

Pediatric telehealth has a sensible role: after-hours triage, behavioral and adolescent mental health, follow-ups for stable conditions, and certain rashes and acute concerns. The American Academy of Pediatrics treats telehealth as a supplement to the medical home, not a replacement. The platform you choose should treat it the same way.

The short version

Verify the clinicians

Pediatrics is an ABMS-recognized specialty with a residency-trained pathway. The American Board of Pediatrics (an ABMS member board) certifies pediatricians; verification is at certificationmatters.org. Pediatric NPs and PAs have specific training and certification pathways. Adolescent medicine is a recognized subspecialty for some clinicians.

For a service marketed as "pediatric," ask explicitly whether visits are with pediatricians or pediatric-trained clinicians. Some general telehealth services advertise "kids' care" while offering it through generalist clinicians whose pediatric training is brief. The American Academy of Pediatrics has guidance favoring care by clinicians with pediatric training; that is worth taking seriously.

Integration with the medical home

The "medical home" — a continuous primary care relationship that knows the child — is the AAP's central model for pediatric care. A pediatric telehealth service should integrate with this model, not undermine it. Useful patterns:

For families without a regular pediatrician, a telehealth service may be the entry point, but eventually a continuous in-person primary care relationship is a goal.

After-hours availability

One of the highest-value uses of pediatric telehealth is after-hours triage and care. A child develops a fever at 9 p.m.; the question is whether home care, an urgent care visit, or the emergency department is appropriate. A telehealth pediatrician on the line can usually answer this and, when appropriate, treat. Look for:

Adolescent confidentiality

Most US states grant adolescents independent rights to consent to certain types of care without parental involvement — most commonly mental health, reproductive health, and substance use. Age thresholds and covered categories vary. A platform serving adolescents should handle this correctly: scheduling parts of visits with parents present and parts with just the adolescent when needed; structuring the patient portal so that confidential parts of the record are not accessible to the parent; and clear policies on when confidentiality may be broken (typically for safety).

Ask explicitly: how do you handle adolescent confidentiality? A platform with no answer is not equipped for adolescent care. See telehealth for children.

Parental consent and custody

For minors, the legal parent or guardian generally consents to care and accesses the chart on the child's behalf. Custody arrangements complicate this. A platform should handle:

Age range and what is excluded

Some pediatric telehealth services exclude infants under a specific age, certain age ranges (under three months, for example, where any fever is an in-person concern), or certain conditions (severe asthma, complex chronic conditions). Confirm the age range before signing up. For infants under three months, in-person evaluation is the default for most concerns. See when telehealth is not enough.

School and camp forms

Many practices handle routine school and camp forms as part of regular pediatric care. Some pediatric telehealth services can complete these forms when the child has had a recent in-person well visit elsewhere. Pure telehealth services typically cannot conduct the in-person components of an annual well-child exam (height, weight, vital signs, hands-on physical exam) and should not be issuing comprehensive school physical forms based on a video visit alone.

Mental health for adolescents

Telehealth therapy and psychiatric care for adolescents is widely used. For a pediatric telehealth platform that includes mental health, the questions are similar to those for adult mental health: licensed clinicians, evidence-based modalities for the relevant condition, prescriber availability when needed, crisis policies. See choosing a mental health platform and mental health telehealth.

Insurance and pricing

Most pediatric care is insurance-covered, though plan specifics vary. Some pediatric telehealth services are integrated with insurance; some are cash-pay or subscription-based. Confirm coverage and out-of-pocket costs before signing up. Medicaid telehealth coverage for children varies by state. See insurance and telehealth.

What to ask before signing up

Red flags

See red flags in any remote care service.

When this is not enough

For infants under three months with fever, anything resembling respiratory distress, dehydration, possible surgical emergencies, or any acute concern that needs an exam, in-person evaluation is the default. Annual well-child visits, school physicals, and developmental assessment generally need in-person work. See telehealth for children and when telehealth is not enough.

Related reading

Not medical advice. This site provides general educational information about navigating remote healthcare. It does not diagnose, treat, or recommend treatment for any condition. For personal medical questions, talk to a licensed clinician.