It used to begin in a waiting room. The ritual hum of fluorescent lights, the sterile smell of hand sanitizer, the stack of outdated magazines—these were the prelude to a doctor’s visit. Then came the knock, the stethoscope, the eye contact. Trust, though rarely named, was implicit in the setting, anchored by proximity and the performative gravity of the white coat. Today, that ritual is changing. The patient’s journey often begins not in a clinic, but in a browser tab.
The use of telemedicine is increasing, allowing patients easy access to health providers remotely. What does increasing use of telehealth signal about the degree of trust that patients hold for providers and the degree of deference that providers receive?
The answer, like so much in healthcare, is complex. Telehealth has revolutionized access—removing geographic, physical, and logistical barriers for millions of patients. It has democratized consultations, reduced wait times, and allowed care continuity during pandemics and natural disasters. According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the rate of telehealth usage among Medicare beneficiaries surged by over 60-fold in 2020 and has remained well above pre-pandemic levels.
But with this shift comes a subtler, more profound transformation—one that is harder to measure: the unraveling and reweaving of trust between patient and provider.
From Authority to Accessibility
Historically, medicine was built on a vertical model of trust: physicians were custodians of knowledge, and patients deferred to their authority. This dynamic was shaped not only by training and licensure but by the theater of in-person care. The physical presence of a provider—conducting an exam, taking a pulse, reading a chart—affirmed expertise and legitimized recommendations.
In contrast, telehealth flattens this relationship. Through the screen, the symbols of medical authority—white coats, diplomas, clinical instruments—are diminished. The clinical office becomes a bedroom, a kitchen, or a car. The sensory richness of in-person interaction is reduced to audio and pixelated video.
This spatial shift matters. As Harvard Medical School research suggests, patients perceive less formality in virtual encounters and are more likely to question diagnoses or push back against treatment plans. For some providers, this challenges long-held assumptions about their role. For some patients, it marks a welcome evolution toward parity.
The Algorithmic Doctor Will See You Now
Layered into this shift is the increasing integration of AI-based tools into telehealth platforms. Symptom checkers, automated triage bots, and predictive diagnostics increasingly supplement—or even substitute—human judgment.
This trend complicates the trust equation further. When patients receive a treatment plan generated or supported by an algorithm, are they trusting the doctor or the software? When a virtual visit is mediated through a platform owned by a tech company, does institutional loyalty shift from provider to interface?
A 2023 report by the Journal of Medical Internet Research found that patient trust in telehealth is heavily platform-dependent. Ratings, UI design, and perceived technological sophistication influence user confidence more than clinical credentials alone.
In short, design is becoming the new bedside manner.
Trust in Fragmented Care
Telehealth also contributes to a phenomenon known as “provider fragmentation.” Patients, especially those using app-based services or urgent care platforms, often interact with rotating clinicians they’ve never met before—and may never meet again.
This episodic care model favors convenience over continuity. While it can be effective for minor or acute issues, it weakens the relational thread that historically underpinned medical trust. As The Lancet Digital Health has argued, continuity of care remains a key determinant of patient satisfaction, adherence, and outcomes—even in digital environments.
Without this continuity, providers may struggle to establish rapport, and patients may hesitate to disclose sensitive information. The intimacy of care, once forged through familiarity and time, is now subject to the constraints of bandwidth and session limits.
Deference or Dialogue?
Despite these challenges, some observers see opportunity. The rise of telehealth may not signal a decline in trust, but rather a transformation—from deference to dialogue.
Younger generations, especially Gen Z and Millennials, are more likely to view healthcare as a collaborative process. They are accustomed to Googling symptoms, crowd-sourcing experiences, and questioning authority. For them, telehealth’s informality aligns with a broader cultural shift toward shared decision-making and medical pluralism.
In this context, trust is not about obedience but transparency. Patients don’t need to see a doctor in a lab coat—they need clear communication, timely access, and respect for their autonomy.
This evolution has precedent. In the 1960s and ’70s, feminist health movements challenged patriarchal models of medicine and demanded patient empowerment. Today’s digital revolution carries echoes of that disruption, albeit filtered through software instead of pamphlets.
The Risk of Overcorrection
Still, not all shifts are improvements. In the move away from deference, we risk eroding a necessary form of professional respect. Clinical training, experience, and judgment matter. So does the ability to conduct physical exams, interpret subtleties, and respond to crises in real time.
There’s a growing concern among clinicians that digital interactions are breeding skepticism—not critical thinking, but mistrust. A 2024 survey by the American Medical Association found that nearly one-third of physicians reported increased patient resistance to clinical advice delivered via telehealth compared to in-person visits.
And in some cases, this erosion of trust has consequences. Missed follow-ups, premature discharges, and incorrect self-management are all more common in patients who express lower levels of trust in their providers, according to a study by the Annals of Family Medicine.
A Hybrid Future?
The solution may lie not in rejecting telehealth, but in refining it. Hybrid care models—blending virtual and in-person encounters—offer a path forward. These models allow patients to benefit from the convenience of telehealth while preserving the relational depth of traditional medicine.
To succeed, however, they must prioritize relational design—intentionally building systems that support trust, not just transactions. This includes longer telehealth appointments, better provider continuity, integrated records, and training clinicians in digital bedside manner.
It also means being honest about telehealth’s limitations. Not all conditions can be treated through a screen. Not all patients feel comfortable in digital spaces. And not all trust can be rebuilt after it’s been commodified.
Trust, Reimagined
The future of healthcare is digital—but the future of healing remains human. As telehealth continues to evolve, so too must our understanding of what trust looks like in a mediated age.
No longer rooted in white coats or clinical settings, trust today is built through communication, continuity, and clarity. Deference may fade, but confidence doesn’t have to. In fact, when done right, telehealth could forge a new model of care—one less hierarchical, more accessible, and perhaps, even more humane.