A single paragraph in statute can determine whether a rural patient logs on or falls off the care grid. On March 21, 2025, Representatives Ro Khanna (D-CA) and Mike Kelly (R-PA) unveiled H.R. 2263, the Telehealth Coverage Act of 2025, proposing to amend Title XVIII of the Social Security Act to make permanent key Medicare telehealth flexibilities originally tied to the COVID-19 public health emergency. With all temporary waivers set to expire on September 30, 2025—a looming “policy cliff” flagged by the Telehealth Resource Center—provider organizations have mobilized a full-scale lobbying campaign to secure passage before care access contracts.
From Pandemic Necessity to Legislative Permanence
During the pandemic, Medicare broadly lifted geographical limits on telehealth, allowed home as an originating site, and permitted audio-only visits for mental-health services, expanding care to millions. Subsequent short-term extensions—most recently through March 31, 2025, via the American Relief Act of 2025 (MWE.com)—provided stopgap relief. Yet without statutory change, beneficiaries would revert to pre-2020 restrictions: rural site requirements, clinician-site mandates, and video-only modalities, imperiling continuity of care.
H.R. 2263 addresses these “cliff” concerns by codifying permanent coverage for telehealth services furnished by eligible providers in any location, endorsing audio-only options for behavioral health, and sustaining FQHC/RHC distant-site participation. The bill also extends the DEA/HHS temporary rule permitting Schedule II–V prescribing via telehealth through 2025.
The Mechanics of Lobbying: Provider Coalitions Mobilize
Within weeks of H.R. 2263’s introduction, a constellation of stakeholders launched coordinated advocacy:
- Policy Brief Development
The American Hospital Association (AHA) released a detailed fact sheet quantifying the financial losses hospitals would face if telehealth waivers lapsed, citing a projected $3.2 billion drop in rural Medicare revenue. - Grassroots Outreach
The American Telemedicine Association (ATA) activated its grassroots network, encouraging over 15,000 members to send templated letters and postcards to their representatives, emphasizing constituent stories of saved travel time and reduced hospital admissions. - Direct Lobbying Visits
In May and June, ATA lobbyists—and representatives from the American Medical Association—conducted over 120 in-person meetings on Capitol Hill, focusing on members of the House Energy and Commerce and Senate Finance Committees, which hold jurisdiction over Medicare policy. - Congressional Hearings and Testimony
The House Ways and Means Committee convened a hearing on June 10; witnesses included rural primary-care physicians, FQHC directors, and patient-advocate groups. Their testimony, drawn from an ATA-commissioned survey showing 68 percent patient satisfaction with virtual care, underscored the human toll of reinstating restrictions. - Coalition Letters
A coalition of 42 healthcare associations, from the National Association of Community Health Centers to the American Psychiatric Association, submitted a joint letter urging Congress to pass H.R. 2263 prior to the September 30 deadline, lest seniors lose access to telepsychiatry and chronic-care follow-ups. - Media Campaigns
Professional society journals and trade outlets ran editorials and op-eds—often penned by prominent neurologists and oncologists—arguing that telehealth innovations drive quality improvements and reduce costs, countering cost-concerns that threaten to derail the bill.
Lobbying Influence on Legislative Language
Lobbyists’ influence extends beyond urging passage; it shapes the bill’s precise scope. Initial drafts of H.R. 2263 limited audio-only flexibilities to mental-health services. ATA-backed amendments have broadened that provision to include chronic-disease management—reflecting ATA’s April policy brief recommending parity across specialties. Similarly, the original bill tethered FQHC/RHC distant-site status to budget neutrality; providers successfully advocated for removal of that constraint, securing an unqualified inclusion for community sites.
Policy Cliff Dynamics and October 1 Deadline
Analysts at the Telehealth Resource Center warn that even a one-day lapse on October 1, 2025, would revert Medicare rule-sets overnight, sowing confusion among providers and triggering claim denials. Hospitals and clinics must update billing systems, train staff on reinstated in-person requirements, and notify patients of changing modalities—costs that advocates estimate at $200 million in administrative expenses. This “policy cliff” underscores urgency: Congress must reconcile bipartisan agreement with legislative calendars by September 2025.
Counter-Lobbying and Opposition Concerns
Not all stakeholders champion full permanency. Conservative fiscal-policy groups caution that unrestrained telehealth could increase Medicare spending without corresponding quality gains. They lobby for narrow waivers tied to robust outcome metrics, and some rural-state legislators resist broad audio-only reimbursement, fearing fraud. CMS’s Office of the Actuary projects a 5 percent uptick in telehealth utilization if waivers persist, raising questions about cost control.
Medicare Advantage plans also weigh in. While some appreciate reduced hospitalizations through virtual monitoring, others warn that fee-for-service parity may disincentivize in-person care coordination vital to managing complex cases. These payers have held closed-door meetings with House appropriators to propose value-based telehealth pilots as a compromise.
The Road to Final Passage
H.R. 2263 has cleared the House Energy and Commerce Committee and now awaits floor consideration. In the Senate, companion legislation is expected in the next session; Senator Michael Bennet (D-CO) and Senator John Cornyn (R-TX) are poised to introduce S. 1187, leveraging the House’s language. Leaders have signaled intentions to bundle the telehealth bill with broader Medicare extenders in a must-pass end-of-year package.
Exact procedural steps include: floor debate, possible amendments (e.g., budgetary offsets, sunset clauses for specific services), reconciliation between House and Senate versions, and final enrollment by both chambers. The White House has indicated support via a June 15 statement emphasizing telehealth’s role in “equitable access,” increasing momentum for executive concurrence.
Beyond Permanency: Implementation and Oversight
Assuming enactment, CMS must issue updated rulemaking by mid-2025 to align Medicare Benefit Policy Manuals with statutory changes. Health systems and billing vendors will require transition guidance to avoid coding errors. CMS enforcement units will monitor telehealth claim volumes and audit for compliance, particularly regarding technology platforms’ privacy and security standards under HIPAA.
Conclusion
The Telehealth Coverage Act of 2025 represents a critical inflection point for virtual care’s permanence in Medicare. Its bipartisan foundation acknowledges telehealth’s patient-centered value, while intense provider-group lobbying highlights the high stakes before the October 1, 2025 policy cliff. As Congress negotiates final language, health-policy stakeholders—from hospitals to payers—must continue mobilizing behind meticulously crafted advocacy strategies. In the coming months, the interplay of political will, lobbying muscle, and legislative pragmatism will determine whether telehealth flexibilities become an enduring pillar of American healthcare or retreat into the annals of pandemic exigency.