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Walmart's announcement last week that it would acquire telehealth company MeMD to provide virtual care nationwide for primary, urgent and behavioral healthcare is a bigger deal than Amazon's March rollout of its virtual primary care services, according to consultant Paul Keckley of The Keckley Report. "I think it's a strategic play, I think it's bigger than Amazon," Keckley
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A new Arizona law could permanently expand statewide use of virtual and telephonic doctors visits, which became more commonplace during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The law, signed by Gov. Doug Ducey on Wednesday, makes permanent telehealth flexibility that had been permitted under executive orders Ducey issued during Arizona s COVID-19 public health emergency.
The law takes effect immediately, officials with the Governor s Office said.
One key provision of that expanded flexibility was requiring health care insurance companies to expand telehealth coverage for all services that would normally be covered for an in-person visit. It catapults Arizona to the front of the line in terms of telehealth law nationally, said Dr. Ronald Weinstein, founding director of the University of Arizona s Arizona Telemedicine Program and a president emeritus of the American Telemedicine Association. It s huge.