Telemedicine Malpractice: Emerging Legal Standards
Telemedicine malpractice occupies one of the most contested frontiers in American health law, where the expansion of remote clinical services has outpaced the development of clear liability rules. This page examines how courts and regulators are defining duty, breach, and causation when care is delivered across digital channels, how jurisdictional complexity compounds every claim, and where existing tort doctrine maps onto — or fails to fit — the remote care environment. The intersection of state licensing law, federal oversight programs, and evolving standard of care doctrine makes telemedicine liability a materially distinct subspecialty within medical malpractice.
Definition and scope
Telemedicine malpractice refers to a negligence or professional liability claim arising from clinical care delivered through electronic communication technologies — including synchronous video consultation, asynchronous store-and-forward imaging review, remote patient monitoring (RPM), and AI-assisted diagnostic tools — rather than in-person encounters. The American Medical Association's Telehealth Policy page distinguishes between modalities: live video, store-and-forward, RPM, and mobile health, each of which generates distinct documentation and liability footprints.
The scope of potential claims is broad. Because telemedicine frequently involves providers licensed in State A treating patients physically located in State B, disputes over which state's standard of care governs — and which state's statute of limitations applies — are structurally unavoidable. Federal frameworks add a second layer: the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) sets reimbursement eligibility rules that intersect with coverage determinations relevant to damages calculations. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has also asserted jurisdiction over deceptive practices in telehealth platform marketing, creating a regulatory perimeter beyond state tort law.
Malpractice claims under federal programs — including Veterans Affairs telehealth services — fall under the Federal Tort Claims Act (28 U.S.C. § 1346(b)), a separate procedural and liability framework covered in detail at Government Entity Medical Malpractice (FTCA).
How it works
Telemedicine malpractice claims proceed through the same four core elements as any negligence action — duty, breach, causation, and damages — but each element is complicated by the remote care context.
1. Establishing the duty of care
A physician-patient relationship must exist before a duty attaches. In telemedicine, formation of that relationship is contested when a patient uses an on-demand platform and is matched to a provider without a prior relationship. The American Telemedicine Association (ATA) and state medical boards have issued guidance distinguishing consultative arrangements (duty may be limited) from primary care delivery (full duty attaches). As of 2023, at least 37 states had enacted specific telemedicine practice statutes addressing relationship formation, according to the Center for Connected Health Policy (CCHP).
2. Defining the applicable standard of care
Courts are divided on whether a telemedicine encounter should be judged against a national standard or the standard prevailing where the patient is physically located. The AMA's Code of Medical Ethics, Opinion 1.2.12 holds that remote care must meet the same ethical and clinical standards as in-person care, a position courts in California and Texas have referenced in pretrial motions. This contrasts with the older "locality rule," still operative in a minority of jurisdictions, which ties the standard to local practice.
3. Breach and causation in a remote context
Physical examination limitations are the most frequently cited breach theory. A clinician who cannot auscultate, palpate, or directly inspect a patient must document the diagnostic reasoning that substitutes for those steps. Gaps in that documentation become the evidentiary fulcrum in expert witness testimony. Causation disputes often turn on whether a competent in-person examination would have altered the clinical decision — a counterfactual that interacts directly with the loss of chance doctrine.
4. Damages and documentation
Damages analysis follows standard tort frameworks, distinguishing economic from noneconomic damages. Platform-generated records — video session logs, chat transcripts, EHR-integrated RPM data — function as primary evidence and are subject to the same authentication standards as conventional medical records.
Common scenarios
Telemedicine malpractice claims cluster into identifiable fact patterns:
-
Misdiagnosis via synchronous video — A provider assesses symptoms remotely, fails to detect physical signs visible only on examination, and the patient suffers harm from delayed or incorrect diagnosis. This pattern parallels traditional misdiagnosis liability but adds the threshold question of whether the modality was appropriate for the presenting complaint.
-
Prescription errors on remote platforms — Controlled substance prescribing through telehealth platforms without adequate clinical assessment has generated federal enforcement actions. The DEA's telemedicine prescribing rules (updated 2023) require in-person evaluation before prescribing Schedule II–III controlled substances in most circumstances, and violations of those rules are available as evidence of breach. This intersects with medication error malpractice liability.
-
Informed consent failures in remote encounters — State-specific informed consent statutes generally require disclosure of the limitations of remote examination. Failure to obtain consent acknowledging those limitations — or providing that consent in a platform's boilerplate without clinical discussion — is a recurring claim. At least 19 states have enacted statutory informed consent requirements specific to telemedicine, per CCHP's 2023 state policy tracking data.
-
Cross-border licensing violations as evidence of negligence — When a provider renders care in a state where they hold no license, the licensing violation does not itself establish malpractice, but plaintiffs use it as evidence of per se breach or to establish that the standard of care was not met. The Interstate Medical Licensure Compact (IMLC) addresses multi-state licensing but does not eliminate the underlying liability question.
-
Mental health platform liability — Remote behavioral health services present distinct risks: suicide risk assessment by video, medication management for psychiatric conditions, and crisis intervention limitations. These claims overlap with mental health malpractice standards and carry heightened scrutiny of platform triage protocols.
Decision boundaries
Determining whether a telemedicine claim is viable — and in which jurisdiction — requires analysis along four intersecting dimensions:
Jurisdiction and choice of law
The dominant approach applies the law of the state where the patient is located at the time of the encounter, treating that as the place of the tort. A minority of courts apply the law of the state where the provider is licensed. Practitioners analyzing cross-border claims should map the governing statute of limitations under both candidate states, referencing state-by-state limitations rules, before filing.
Federal versus state jurisdiction
Claims against federal telehealth programs (VA, Indian Health Service, Federally Qualified Health Centers) are channeled through the FTCA and must comply with mandatory administrative exhaustion before suit. Claims against private platforms remain in state court. The jurisdictional boundary is analyzed at Federal vs. State Jurisdiction in Medical Malpractice.
Platform liability versus provider liability
Telemedicine platforms that employ physicians directly face vicarious liability exposure under respondeat superior, the same doctrine applied to hospitals — see vicarious liability in hospital settings. Platforms structured as technology intermediaries, with independent contractor physicians, attempt to shield themselves from direct liability, though courts in 5 jurisdictions have rejected the independent contractor defense where the platform exercised substantial control over clinical protocols.
Type of care modality — synchronous vs. asynchronous
| Dimension | Synchronous (live video) | Asynchronous (store-and-forward) |
|---|---|---|
| Real-time assessment available | Yes | No |
| Documentation risk | Session log + EHR notes | Imaging/text record only |
| Standard of care baseline | Approaches in-person | Narrower — specialty-specific |
| Causation complexity | Moderate | Higher (delayed review claims) |
| Jurisdiction trigger | Patient's location at connection | Typically where image interpreted |
The ATA's Practice Guidelines for Live, On-Demand Primary and Urgent Care and the CCHP's state law database are the primary reference frameworks for classifying which modality-specific rules apply before analyzing breach.
References
- American Medical Association — Telehealth Policy
- [American Medical Association — Code of Medical Ethics, Opinion 1.2.12](https://code-medical-ethics.ama