Telehealth can lower the friction of medical care for older adults — fewer trips, fewer waiting rooms, more frequent contact with specialists who would otherwise be hours away. It also creates new friction: small fonts, fast clinicians, devices that need updates, and HIPAA rules that require paperwork before you can be in the room. This page is for adult children and other caregivers helping a parent navigate remote care.
The short version
- For older eyes, ears, and hands, a tablet or laptop with a large screen and external speaker is usually better than a phone.
- Captions help; most major video platforms now offer live captioning, and some let the patient mark hearing impairment to slow the clinician.
- HIPAA personal representative rules and a durable power of attorney for healthcare determine who can speak for and access information about a parent.
- Medicare beneficiaries have access to telehealth, with details that have shifted since the pandemic — check current CMS guidance for what is covered now.
- Medication reconciliation across multiple specialists is the highest-yield caregiver task. Build and maintain a single current medication list.
- Set up the technology when it is not needed. Doing it five minutes before a 9 a.m. appointment with a 78-year-old parent rarely ends well.
Device and environment setup
Pick the right screen
A tablet on a stand, or a laptop, beats a handheld phone for most older patients. Larger text, easier camera framing, less arm fatigue. Place the device at eye level so the camera looks at the face, not up the chin. Use a window in front, not behind. The page on preparing for a telehealth visit covers framing in detail.
Audio is more important than video
If a parent has any hearing impairment, the audio choice matters more than the camera. Headphones (over-ear are easier than earbuds) connected to the tablet or laptop are usually clearer than the device speaker, especially if the room has hard floors. For people who use hearing aids, many modern aids stream audio directly from the device by Bluetooth; that is worth setting up before the visit. A hearing loop, if the home has one, is excellent.
Captions and pace
Live captions are now a standard feature on the major video platforms used in healthcare. Turn them on. Imperfect captions are still helpful as a backup channel for words that get missed. At the start of the visit, it is reasonable to say "my mother has some hearing loss; please speak slowly and face the camera." A clinician who races regardless can be redirected: "Could you say that again, more slowly?"
Reduce cognitive load
A simplified home screen with a single large icon to launch the appointment is more useful than a polished setup. If the platform supports an "appointment link" that opens directly without a login, use it. Avoid asking a parent to remember a password during the visit.
Caregiver presence and HIPAA
Under HIPAA, the patient (or their personal representative) controls who can hear the visit and access the chart. A spouse or adult child does not automatically have access; they need either the patient's permission or a formal proxy role.
Personal representative status
HIPAA recognizes a "personal representative" — someone who under state law can act on behalf of the patient. For adults, this usually means a durable power of attorney for healthcare, a court-appointed guardian, or, in some states, a designated healthcare agent. The personal representative has rights equivalent to the patient with respect to protected health information.
Durable power of attorney for healthcare
The single most useful document for adult children of older parents is a durable power of attorney for healthcare, naming an agent to make medical decisions if the parent cannot. State laws vary; most states have standardized forms. Combined with HIPAA authorization language, the document allows the agent to receive information and direct care.
Verbal permission for a single visit
If formal proxy paperwork is not in place, the parent can usually give verbal permission at the start of a visit for a caregiver to be present and participate. The clinician will document who is in the room and on whose authority. This works for individual visits but is brittle compared to a written authorization.
HIPAA authorization for ongoing access
Many practices have a HIPAA authorization form that allows the patient to designate one or more people who can access information and discuss care with clinicians. Filling this out at registration and keeping it updated saves enormous time later.
Medicare and telehealth coverage
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) administer Medicare. During the COVID-19 public health emergency, CMS expanded telehealth flexibilities for Medicare beneficiaries — broader services covered, audio-only allowed in many cases, fewer geographic restrictions. Some flexibilities have become permanent or have been extended; others have not. Coverage details have shifted on a calendar that does not always match a year boundary, so check current CMS guidance or call the practice directly to confirm what is covered now. See insurance and telehealth.
Medicare Advantage plans can offer telehealth benefits beyond traditional Medicare, with their own networks and coverage rules. For specific telehealth visits, ask the practice in advance whether they participate in your parent's plan and whether the visit is covered.
Medication reconciliation
For an older patient on five or more medications across multiple specialists, the highest-yield caregiver activity is maintaining a single current medication list. Inconsistent lists across providers cause real harm: duplicate prescribing, dangerous interactions, and missed doses.
Build a one-page list with: drug name, dose, how often it is taken, what time, what it is for, who prescribes it, and the date last reviewed. Bring it to every visit. Compare it to the clinician's list during the visit and ask them to update theirs to match what is actually being taken. The 21st Century Cures Act gives access to the medication list in the patient portal — see transferring medical records — but reconciling across multiple practices' portals is still manual work.
Specific things to flag
- Anticholinergic medications (some antihistamines, sleep aids, bladder drugs) — the cumulative load matters in older adults.
- Benzodiazepines and similar sedatives — fall and cognitive risk.
- Opioids — interactions and respiratory risk.
- Anticoagulants — bleeding risk and interactions.
- Any new symptom that started within weeks of a medication change.
Specific situations
Hearing impairment
Beyond captions and headphones, ask the practice in advance whether they offer interpreters or accommodations. Some practices have ASL interpretation available through video. Speak slowly, face the camera, and avoid talking over the parent. Send written follow-up by portal message after the visit so anything missed is on record.
Cognitive impairment
For a parent with mild cognitive impairment, the caregiver's role is different — present at every visit, taking notes, advocating clearly. For more advanced impairment, telehealth has limits; conditions involving safety, behavior, or function changes often need in-person evaluation. See when telehealth is not enough.
Vision impairment
Increase font size on the device. Use the assistive features built into tablets and laptops. The clinician should be told the parent is visually impaired so they describe images and results rather than relying on the parent reading them on screen.
Mobility limitations
Telehealth shines here: no transit, no parking, no waiting room. Set up the device where the parent is comfortable and supported. A tablet on a tray over a recliner works well.
Setting up before there is a problem
The easiest time to get all this in place is when the parent is well. Practical steps: assemble proxy documents (durable POA for healthcare, HIPAA authorizations) and store them somewhere both you and the parent can find them. Verify the parent's portal logins for each practice and confirm you have permission to access them. Build the medication list and update it after every visit. Identify which devices and which platform each practice uses, install the apps, run the test calls. The first telehealth visit should not be the first time you see the platform.
For home equipment — BP cuffs, glucose meters, weight scales — see home medical equipment worth buying. For vital signs technique, see measuring your own vitals at home.
What to ask each clinician
- Can my [adult child / spouse / caregiver] be in the room and participate in visits?
- What is the best way for them to reach you between visits?
- Can both of us have access to the patient portal?
- Will you send the visit summary in writing after each appointment?
- Are you communicating with the other specialists involved?
- Do you have any concerns about polypharmacy or interactions on the current med list?
When this is not enough
Telehealth supplements but does not replace primary care for older adults. Annual in-person visits, hands-on assessments of frailty and balance, and on-site exams for symptoms involving the abdomen, neurological function, or skin remain essential. New cognitive symptoms, falls, weight loss, and significant function changes often need in-person evaluation. See 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.