Regulatory Landscape: 50-State Telehealth Law Mapping
CMS Reimbursement Framework & CPT Codes
State Medicaid Coverage Analysis
Professional Licensing & Compact Agreements
Consent & Privacy Requirements
Case Studies: Health System Integration Models
Blockchain & Price Transparency
Investment Thesis
Executive Summary
Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM) represents the fastest-growing segment of digital health, with regulatory tailwinds accelerating adoption. This comprehensive analysis maps the 50-state regulatory environment, CMS reimbursement mechanisms, and health system adoption patterns to identify investment opportunities for Salud Capital's portfolio companies.
Key Findings:
23 states cover RPM through Medicaid; 42 states have private payer legislation
CMS RPM CPT codes (99457-99458) reimburse $55-95 per patient per month
Professional licensing compacts enable multi-state practice; 29 states in IMLC, 34 in Nurse Compact, 28 in PT Compact
Two dominant health system models emerge: bundled payments (OrthoCarolina) and capitated risk (Emory)
Market opportunity: $12.3B by 2025 (vs. $2.1B in 2019)
RPM Market Opportunity & Growth Drivers
RPM adoption is accelerating due to convergence of regulatory permission, reimbursement incentives, and clinical validation:
Growth Drivers
Value-Based Care Transition: Healthcare moving from fee-for-service to value-based payment models (bundled payments, capitation, risk-based contracts). RPM enables care teams to manage costs by preventing hospitalizations.
Chronic Disease Prevalence: 157M Americans have chronic disease (52% of population). Hypertension (40M), diabetes (37M), heart disease (16M) are ideal RPM use cases.
Cost Pressures: 30-day readmission costs hospitals $1,500-$3,000 per patient. RPM can reduce readmissions 20-30% at $150-300/patient cost.
Labor Efficiency: Care team shortage (30K RN gap by 2026). RPM extends existing clinical capacity 3-4x by automating monitoring workflows.
Technology Maturation: Low-cost wearables ($50-300) now measure vital signs (BP, HR, glucose, O2, weight) with hospital-grade accuracy.
Regulatory Landscape: 50-State Telehealth Law Mapping
Unlike traditional telehealth which has scattered state restrictions, RPM benefits from increasingly favorable regulatory treatment:
RPM-Specific Laws by State
Category
States
Count
Key Provisions
Full RPM Coverage
CA, CO, FL, GA, IL, MA, NY, PA, TX, WA, others
28
Explicit RPM coverage in statute; reimbursement mandates
RPM Permitted
Most remaining states
18
No explicit prohibition; payer discretion
Limited/Restricted
AL, MS, OK, SC (limited)
4
Geographic restrictions or provider type limitations
CMS Reimbursement Framework & CPT Codes
CMS established reimbursement for RPM in 2018, creating a durable revenue model for providers and intermediaries:
RPM CPT Codes (Effective Jan 2019)
CPT Code
Description
Requirements
Reimbursement
99457
RPM care management (first 20 min)
16+ days of monitoring per month, qualified device, care plan established
$55
99458
RPM care management (each additional 20 min)
Same as 99457; applies to high-touch patients
$38
99091
Digitally stored/transferred patient-generated data review
Minimum 30 minutes review per month
$62
99453
Remote monitoring setup & education
One-time setup encounter (in-person or telehealth)
$58
Annual Revenue Per Patient (Medicare): $55-95/month ($660-1,140 annually) based on care complexity and monitoring intensity.
State Medicaid Coverage Analysis
State Medicaid programs are increasingly covering RPM, though coverage is fragmented and varies by diagnosis:
Conditional Coverage (9 states): IL, KY, MI, MN, MO, NC, OH, VA, WI — Cover RPM for specific diagnoses (e.g., diabetes, COPD, CHF only); may require health home status
Limited/Pilot (6 states): AR, AZ, LA, NM, NV, UT — Pilot programs or limited geography; coverage being expanded