Your Everyday Guide to Telemedicine

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A virtual visit allows you and your doctor to see one another from the comfort and safety of your own home.Alistair Berg/Getty Images

Telemedicine — connecting with a healthcare provider for a virtual visit using a smartphone, tablet, or computer — is soaring in America, and it’s not just because of the COVID-19 pandemic, although the crisis is focusing increased attention on this option for seeking medical care remotely.

“Telemedicine can make it easier, faster, and safer to get the healthcare you and your family need,” says Rachel Bishop, MD, medical director of telemedicine at Houston Methodist Primary Care Group in Texas.

“Wait times are shorter than most in-person medical visits. You don’t have to take time off from work or find childcare. And virtual visits can reduce your exposure to viruses and other infections.”

Precisely because of the coronavirus pandemic, the federal government, some local governments, health insurance companies, health systems, and private telemedicine companies are all taking steps to make virtual medical visits and online health assessments available to more people.

Some systems are offering free virtual COVID-19 assessments to anyone who contacts them, and while the disease cannot be diagnosed without a lab test, a remote healthcare provider can direct you to the next appropriate step, whether it’s staying home or seeking in-person care.

There’s no better time to learn about your telemedicine options than now.

The Pros and Cons of Telemedicine

The Pros and Cons of Telemedicine

Telemedicine vs. Telehealth

The term “telemedicine” is often used interchangeably with the term “telehealth.” However, some organizations differentiate between the two.

The American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP), for example, defines telemedicine as the practice of using technology to deliver medical care at a distance, over a telecommunications infrastructure, between a patient at an originating site and a physician or other licensed practitioner at another site.

The AAFP defines telehealth, meanwhile, as a wide range of electronic and telecommunications technologies that support a variety of remote healthcare services, such as medical, health coaching, and education services.

Another term you may come across is “telecare,” which usually refers to using technology to monitor and care for elderly or disabled people remotely.

Common Questions & Answers

What is telemedicine?

Telemedicine is the practice of connecting with a healthcare provider for a virtual visit through your computer, tablet, or smartphone. Doctors can provide information, diagnose conditions, recommend treatments, provide mental health counseling, and prescribe medication via a telemedicine appointment.

What are some advantages of telemedicine?
Telemedicine appointments can save time spent in a waiting room; they can help prevent exposure to infectious germs; they can help you access health services that may otherwise require a long drive; and in many cases, they can cost less than a traditional appointment.
Is telemedicine covered by insurance?
Some, but not all, insurance plans cover telemedicine appointments, and some may cover appointments only with certain telemedicine providers. You should check with your health insurance provider for coverage details before making a telemedicine appointment.
What do I need for a telemedicine appointment?
Ideally, you should have a fully charged device with a strong signal and a quiet, well-lit place to sit during the visit. It can help to prepare a list of questions before your appointment and to have on hand a list of any health conditions you may have as well as a list of prescription and over-the-counter drugs and supplements you are taking.
What are some of the best uses for telemedicine?
Telemedicine works well for managing symptoms that are persistent or worrisome, but that are unlikely to be life-threatening. These may include coughs, sore throats, skin rashes, mild diarrhea or constipation, and flu-like symptoms. Telemedicine can also be a good option for following up after an in-person medical visit.

How to Get Started Using Telemedicine

With more and more medical practices offering virtual care options, you may want to check first with your primary care doctor, if you have one, or a group medical practice with which you already have a relationship, to see if they’re using phone calls, video chats, or other online methods to conduct remote patient visits.

Pediatricians are also increasingly offering telemedicine, and many specialists, such as cardiologists, neurologists, obstetricians, and oncologists, are also offering care to their existing patients via telemedicine.

You may also want to check with your health insurance plan to see whether it has its own telemedicine interface, has partnered with a telemedicine company, or has preferred services. Using a telemedicine plan that accepts your insurance is one way to keep your costs down.

Another option, if you’re employed, is to ask your human resources department if the company has a preferred telemedicine provider — and whether there’s a cost savings to you in using it.

Medicaid covers some telehealth services, although the specifics vary from state to state. You should contact your healthcare provider if you have Medicaid to ask what services are available to you.

Medicare beneficiaries also now have broader access to virtual visits, following changes to federal rules in March 2020, according to the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (PDF).

Some physical urgent care centers are offering telehealth, and at the very least, most will speak to you on the phone about whether or not to come to the center. If you have any upper respiratory symptoms or other symptoms suggesting possible COVID-19, they likely will have special instructions for your visit.

Telemedicine apps are another option. Many apps offer basic primary and urgent care, and some offer additional services, such as dermatology, nutrition counseling, or mental health help.

What You’ll Need for a Successful Virtual Visit

Telemedicine experts recommend having these on hand for a successful virtual visit:

A Charged, Plugged-In Device With a Strong Signal You don’t want to run out of power or lose your connection during your appointment! Use Wi-Fi if your cellular data plan is limited.

Ear Buds With a Built-in Microphone It will be easier to hear the healthcare provider, and for them to hear you.

A Quiet Location With Good Lighting Turn off the TV, mute notifications on your phone, and tell others in your house you’ll be busy for the next 15 to 20 minutes before you start your visit. Make sure there’s enough light for the health professional to see your face — and any rashes or other physical problems you want to show them.

If you’re not at home during the virtual visit, find a quiet, private spot where you can shut the door. “I’ve had people try to do virtual urgent care visits while they’re driving a car. We tell them to hang up and we’ll reschedule later,” Dr. Bishop says.

A Flashlight You may need extra light to give the doctor a clear view of your sore throat, a mouth problem, or even a skin problem. “That’s a big one for our urgent care service at Mount Sinai,” says telemedicine expert Brendan Carr, MD, system chair of emergency medicine for the Mount Sinai Health System in New York City. “People often call for sore throat, but it’s hard to see back of a throat without a flashlight.”

A List of Your Medication and Supplements, Health History, and Questions A telemedicine doctor who’s seeing you for the first time can better help you if they know about any chronic health conditions or other important health issues you have, as well as the prescription and over-the-counter drugs and supplements you currently take. It’s also smart to jot down your questions ahead of time, Bishop suggests.

If you’re seeing your usual doctor via telehealth instead of in-person, be sure to mention any new symptoms you may be having, any new over-the-counter products you may be using, and any prescriptions you need to have refilled.

How to Get Screened Safely for COVID-19 Symptoms

Hospitals across the United States have been offering telehealth coronavirus assessments since the pandemic began, says Dr. Carr. However, in-person visits have resumed to some degree. “We still do a lot of telemedicine visits. But now that we understand the virus a bit better, we evaluate patients in real life in a much more traditional way (face-to-face with masks on),” he explains.

Even now, there are still some benefits to telehealth coronavirus assessments, he notes. “We evaluate lots of people over telemedicine and then refer them for an outpatient test. Telemedicine allows us to deconstruct the traditional visit — the medical evaluation can happen virtually, and then you can swing by a lab and drop off a saliva sample to test for COVID without seeing a doctor again.”

If you're worried that you might have coronavirus symptoms, which include fever, cough, and shortness of breath, you can also use the free online Coronavirus Self-Checker from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which can’t connect you with a doctor but can help you decide whether to contact one yourself. You can also consult one of the private telemedicine companies offering free online assessments, such as Doctor on Demand.

There are also many ways to obtain free at-home COVID-19 tests, including from the U.S. government and through your health insurance.

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Urgent Care: Telemedicine’s Leading Edge

Under normal, nonpandemic circumstances, virtual urgent care may be the best way to deal with non-life-threatening health concerns that crop up in the middle of the night, while you’re on vacation, or when you can’t get to your primary care doctor’s office for some other reason. For symptoms that suggest a sinus infection, urinary tract infection, or pink eye — the same types of issues you’d take to a local urgent care center — a virtual urgent care visit with a doctor can lead to a diagnosis, at-home treatment suggestions, a prescription for medication if needed, and, if necessary, recommendations for tests and follow-ups with an in-person health professional.

Who Provides Virtual Urgent Care A growing number of hospitals, healthcare systems, health insurance companies, and private, direct-to-consumer telemedicine companies all offer urgent care services. Virtual urgent care companies include Amwell, Doctor On Demand, MDLIVEPlushCareTeladoc, and others.

Cost of Virtual Urgent Care A telemedicine urgent care visit could cost as little as $20 — the self-pay rate for anyone who uses Houston Methodist’s urgent care service, according to Bishop. Houston Methodist also accepts insurance for virtual urgent care visits; benefits vary based on patient coverage.

Other urgent care services have varying fees. For example, you may pay more if you use a company that doesn’t take your health insurance (or you don’t have health insurance), and you may pay less if you use a service covered by your health plan or by your employer.

How Virtual Urgent Care Works You need audio and video for this type of telehealth visit, so use a smartphone, tablet, or laptop or desktop computer with a video camera. Download the app for the urgent care service you want to use, and follow the directions for scheduling an appointment and providing credit card information for payment. You can usually meet with a doctor online within minutes.

Virtual Visits and ‘E-Consults’ With Your Own Doctors

When it comes to telemedicine, different primary care practices do it differently. Some practices, such as Parsley Health, offer the option of in-person visits but are able to conduct all care via telehealth — although you will likely still need to visit a physical facility for such things as lab tests, imaging tests, vaccines, and certain procedures.

Other practices may offer only certain types of interactions online. For example, you doctor may be able to review your lab test results or check on your progress after some procedures via phone, video, email, or secure online messaging but still want to see you in the office for other types of care.

In some cases, you’ll need to provide certain data before a virtual visit, such as readings you upload from your glucose meter to your doctor’s patient portal, if you have diabetes, or from a blood pressure monitor if you have high blood pressure.

In rural areas, your family doctor may be able to help you access online health services, such as mental health appointments and visits with specialists. Indeed, video conferencing with specialists is an important way that rural patients and their doctors can get help managing complex chronic diseases.

Major medical centers, including the Cleveland ClinicStanford, and Harvard-affiliated Partners Healthcare, offer virtual second-opinion programs that give you access to top specialists who can review a medical diagnosis or treatment plan online.

If you’d like to try an online consultation with a doctor you currently see, ask the doctor, or their office assistant, if this service is available and right for you.

“A consult or scheduled virtual visit with your own doctor means you’re working with someone who knows you and your health history,” Bishop says. “Some doctors in our system will also do on-demand urgent care visits for their own patients, so it’s worth asking.”

Generally, you pay the same price for a virtual visit with your doctor as an in-person visit. But pricing and availability vary among doctors, health systems, health insurers, and states, so it’s worth checking with your doctor and with your health insurer to find out what’s available to you, Bishop adds.

Telepsychology Expands Access to Mental Healthcare

Having a virtual visit with a mental health professional has become a go-to option for people with anxiety, depression, and other mood or mental health disorders since early 2020, with in-person visits to therapists’ offices and healthcare facilities curtailed because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

However, remote psychotherapy is hardly new. Mental healthcare was among the first disciplines to move to telemedicine or, more specifically, telepsychology, with research on the viability of counseling delivered via phone, video, or both dating back to the early 1960s. The internet and mobile communications devices such as cellphones and tablets have only added to the options in the decades since, according to the American Psychological Association.

What has changed, though, is broader acceptance of telemedicine, or telehealth, within the field, experts say.

Zoom Meetings, Video Calls, and Phone Calls

“Telemedicine provides a socially distanced way for people to access professional services that support their recovery,” says Alice Medalia, PhD, director of the Lieber Recovery Clinic at Columbia University in New York City, which offers telehealth options for psychiatric services.

The facility is not alone, as many hospitals and healthcare offices take similar steps.

Of course, the traditional doctor-patient relationship isn’t the only telemedicine approach gaining use. Platforms such as TalkspaceTeladoc Health, and Doctor-on-Demand can help you set up virtual appointments with mental health professionals, conducted by video call or traditional phone call.

However, not all online platforms offer medications management and remote prescribing; if you need those services, they may connect you to a psychiatrist in your area for further help.

Apps Based on Cognitive Behavioral Therapy

In addition, there are many apps that are designed to use the principles of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) to guide you through what is essentially a self-care regimen of activities and exercises. However, it’s important to note that these apps don’t connect you with a single, trained therapist who oversees your care.

“Many people find CBT apps informative and helpful, and increasingly, therapists are incorporating apps into their practice with patients anyway,” Dr. Medalia says.

However, “they don’t replace a therapist,” she adds. “Rather, they add a new way of accessing help.”

study published in January 2021 in JAMA Psychiatry generally found that these CBT-guided apps are effective at helping people with depression — one of the most common mental health conditions — manage their symptoms, provided they were guided by support from a care professional.

Pros and Cons of Virtual Psychological Care

As with anything else, there are pros and cons to the various virtual care services available in the mental health space, according to Medalia. Although these technologies allow you to maintain vital care services when in-person is not possible, and appointments are easy to schedule around work, school, and family obligations, some important aspects of mental healthcare — such as direct interaction with your therapist — may get lost in the virtual realm, where it may not be as easy to see and interpret changes in facial expression or demeanor, she says.

“And there’s the issue of Zoom fatigue,” with so much of our social and work lives spent on the platform, Medalia adds. “My research on the use of telehealth for people with serious mental illnesses has found that the majority of clients prefer in-person sessions.”

In addition, as important as these virtual services have become, particularly since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, they haven’t solved all the problems related to access to care, according to Medalia. These technologies are “only viable for people who have access to web-connected technology and private space to engage in therapy,” she says. “There is, in fact, a significant percentage of the population that does not have access to the technology needed for telemedicine.”

What Happens at a Gynecology Telemedicine Visit

Much can be accomplished during a virtual visit to the gynecologist, including discussing birth control and getting a prescription for birth control pills; getting advice on urinary tract infections (UTIs), including whether to use an over-the-counter UTI test kit; having your hormone replacement therapy regimen adjusted; having rashes or bumps in the vulvar area examined; and discussing any other health concerns you might have.

However, there are symptoms for which you will likely need to seek urgent or emergency in-person care. Those include, but aren't limited to, any symptoms of a possible ectopic pregnancy, severe vaginal bleeding, complications following a gynecological surgery or other procedure, more severe vaginal or uterine pain, and symptoms of a vaginal infection with a fever.

Learn More About Telemedicine Appointments With a Gynecologist

How Dermatology via Telemedicine Works

Many skin problems are diagnosed primarily by appearance, in combination with a person’s medical history, and that makes dermatology a good candidate for telemedicine. So-called teledermatology is also effective for follow-up visits, when a person has been seen in person in the past, or for medication refills for an ongoing problem.

There are instances where an in-person visit is better, such as for an annual skin check, in which a tool called a dermatoscope allows the doctor to see a magnified view of any skin lesions. And of course, any procedures involving the skin, such as taking a biopsy, need to happen in person.

Learn More About Telemedicine for Dermatology

Telemedicine for Asthma

Good asthma management often requires regular check-ins with a doctor, and virtual visits can be a good alternative to in-person visits for routine appointments.

Telemedicine typically works well for discussing your current treatment plan, refilling prescriptions, and asking your doctor any questions you might have about your health or your treatment plan. Telemedicine has the added benefit of minimizing your in-person exposure to others, and it saves you the time you’d spend traveling to and from appointments.

For some people, opting for a telemedicine appointment also gives them access to allergy-immunology specialists that may be located hours away from where they live.

However, when you connect with your doctor over the phone or by videoconference, your doctor can’t directly measure your vital signs, take your blood pressure, check your peak flow or other respiratory measures, or do any other type of physical examination that might be warranted. If your physician feels you need to have certain lung function tests such as spirometry or plethysmography, you’ll likely need to visit a medical facility to have them done.

Learn More About Telemedicine for Asthma Care

Telemedicine for Addiction and Recovery

A lot of the treatment for addiction and recovery is done through dialogue with a therapist or in a group, and that means that a lot can be accomplished through a virtual visit. For some people, particularly those who live far from an addiction treatment center, virtual visits with a mental health professional can even be more convenient than in-person visits. The drawback is the loss of social support that some people get from in-person meetings with a therapist or other professional.

Addiction and recovery support groups are also widely available online, now that the coronavirus pandemic has made in-person meetings unsafe. Again, while some people appreciate some aspects of virtual recovery meetings, such as the anonymity they can have online, others miss the support they get from in-person meetings.

Learn More About Telemedicine for Addiction and Recovery

Telemedicine for Crohn’s Disease

In some respects, telemedicine is ideal for managing Crohn’s disease, particularly if it allows for more frequent check-ins with your doctor. This form of inflammatory bowel disease benefits from frequent monitoring by a physician and prompt attention if symptoms worsen between scheduled visits.

Because telemedicine eliminates travel time and time spent in a doctor’s waiting room, both routine appointments and urgent appointments to discuss symptom flares can take place more efficiently. That means less time and often less expense for you, and it also means your doctor may have more appointments available when you need them.

There are some instances in which an in-person appointment for Crohn’s disease is necessary, including the initial diagnosis, which generally involves an examination of the inside of your colon and possibly imaging scans. Certain complications of the disease also require a physical exam to determine the best course of treatment. And of course, any surgical procedures must be done in person.

Learn More About Telemedicine and Crohn’s Disease

Remote Cardiac Device Monitoring

Remote cardiac device monitoring — that is, remote monitoring of an implanted cardiac device, such as a pacemaker, implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD), or implanted cardiac monitor–loop recorder — isn’t new. In fact, it’s been around since the early 1970s, although the technology’s improved considerably in the past couple of decades. But the COVID-19 pandemic has illuminated its benefits, including keeping people with heart problems away from hospitals or doctors’ offices, where they could be exposed to contagious illnesses.

Remote monitoring allows your healthcare team to monitor your heart health and the function of your cardiac device without you having to be physically present. Even better, it can communicate this information in real time using wireless technology and a Bluetooth-enabled device.

This means your doctor knows when your device has corrected a heart rhythm abnormality soon after it happens — provided you’re within in close-enough range of your home monitor — rather than several months later, when you make an office visit and have your device data collected with a special wand. It can also alert your provider to a problem with the device, such as a low battery.

While remote cardiac device monitoring isn’t without its technological challenges — including getting knocked offline by weak cellular service — it has been credited with improving patient health through earlier detection and treatment of heart rhythm problems.

Learn More About Remote Cardiac Device Monitoring

When Telemedicine Is Right for Rheumatoid Arthritis

According to position statement (PDF) released by the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) in 2020, the ACR supports the role of telemedicine as a tool that can potentially increase access and improve care for patients with rheumatic diseases, but it should not replace critical face-to-face assessments conducted at medically appropriate intervals.

Learn More About When to Use Virtual Care for Rheumatoid Arthritis

Telemedicine for Migraine Care

Virtual visits can be a great choice for migraine care, particularly when you’re seeing a physician or other healthcare provider with whom you already have a relationship. This is true both because you’ll likely feel more comfortable talking to a professional you already know, and because an in-person physical examination can be an important part of determining the cause — or causes — of your symptoms and the best way to treat them.

Telemedicine for Stroke Care

Telemedicine allows post-stroke patients and their doctors to continue meeting for post-stroke rehabilitative and preventive treatment visits.

But even before the pandemic, one type of remote stroke care for doctors was already well-established: In-hospital telemedicine for stroke care, called telestroke, has been around since the late 1990s. Telestroke describes an arrangement by which remote stroke experts help local emergency physicians assess patients with suspected stroke and decide how to manage their care. The practice helps ensure that people experiencing stroke will receive appropriate care, even if they don’t go to a hospital with its own on-call stroke team.

Learn More About Using Telemedicine for Stroke Care

Physical Therapy via Telemedicine

As long as you have a good internet connection, adequate lighting, and space to lie down, walk, stretch, and turn around while on-camera, you can likely benefit from a virtual physical therapy visit.

Much of what a physical therapist does is analyze how people move and prescribe stretches or exercises that can make moving more efficient and more comfortable. And it turns out, that can be done pretty well remotely, using telemedicine instead of in-person office visits.

Learn More About Telemedicine for Physical Therapy

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Pros of Virtual Medical Visits

Are telemedicine virtual visits worthwhile? According to experts and recent research, the upsides include the following:

They save time. “A lot of people don’t have time to drive to an appointment and then sit in a waiting room for 10, 20 minutes or longer,” says Bishop. “We have patients who use Houston Methodist Virtual Urgent Care at work, going into a private office and shutting the door for their appointment, or using it from home.”

They save money. While the cost of a virtual visit varies widely depending on your health insurance coverage, choice of provider and type of service (read on for details), it’s likely to cost less than a visit to an in-person urgent care center or hospital emergency room for the same problem.

For example, you could spend as little as $0 to $82 for a virtual urgent care visit. That’s a wide range, but it’s less than the average $176 price tag for a visit to an in-person urgent care center or the $350 to $600-plus you could spend for treatment of an earachebronchitis, or strep throat at a hospital emergency room, according to Dignity Health, one of the nation’s largest healthcare providers.

Then there’s the cost of transportation. You won’t have to shell out money for gas and parking or for a taxi, train, or bus. “For someone who’s driving an hour and a half and paying $25 for parking for a routine checkup after a successful knee replacement, a virtual visit can be a big savings,” Carr notes.

Bishop adds childcare costs to the savings, too. “You won’t have to pay a babysitter while you go to the doctor,” she notes. “Just find a quiet spot in your home, tap on the app, and get started.”

You avoid exposure to infectious germs. Virtual visits keep you out of settings where you could be exposed to the flu or other infectious viruses, bacteria, or other germs, Bishop notes. “That can be important if you have low immunity, if something is going around in your community, or at times like this when coronavirus is spreading,” she says. “It can help you stay healthy if you’re not sick, but just need to see the doctor for something minor or for your annual well visit or for a routine visit to manage a chronic health condition such as high blood pressure.”

You get access when health services aren’t available near you. For people who live in rural areas of the United States, telemedicine is helping to bridge big gaps in access to healthcare. According to a cross-sectional study published in JAMA Health in October 2021, of about 10 million rural Medicare beneficiaries, there were 34.8 telemedicine visits per 1,000 beneficiaries in 2019, and 76 percent of these visits were for mental health conditions.

Meanwhile, the CDC is supporting telehealth services in rural areas of the United States that improve stroke care through hospital consultations with far-away neurologists, virtual programs for diabetes management and prevention, quitting smoking, managing epilepsy, and telemedicine screenings for eye diseases.

Potential Downsides to Telemedicine

These possible drawbacks to virtual visits won’t apply to everyone, but they’re worth considering when weighing your options for seeking medical care:

You may still need an in-person appointment or a medical test. Sometimes, the doctor you see onscreen during an urgent care virtual visit may recommend a face-to-face appointment with your own primary care doctor or at a brick-and-mortar urgent care center. You may also need laboratory or other tests to confirm a diagnosis.

You may receive better care in person. In plenty of studies, consumers are extremely happy with telemedicine appointments. But in a study published in May 2019 in the journal Pediatrics, of nearly 530,000 medical visits for respiratory infections in kids ages 0 to 7, researchers from the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center’s Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh found that children received antibiotics at 52 percent of telemedicine visits, but just 42 percent of urgent care and 31 percent of primary care doctor visits. And fewer telemedicine visits followed guidelines for when to prescribe these often-overused drugs.

In a study of 16 online telemedicine companies published in July 2016 in JAMA Dermatology, researchers from the University of California in San Francisco found that sometimes online doctors misdiagnosed skin cancerherpes, and syphilis, in addition to prescribing medication without taking a patient's medical history.

You may not be able to choose your healthcare practitioner. Unlike scheduling an online appointment with your own doctor or arranging for one with a specific specialist, you may not get to choose your provider for a virtual urgent care visit, according to the 2016 JAMA Dermatology study.

Best and Worst Times to Use Telemedicine

You wouldn’t log into a virtual doctor’s visit if you were having heart attack symptoms, but telemedicine can be a good choice for less severe health problems, from an earache to a skin rash.

Best Uses for Virtual Urgent Care The following can often be handled well by virtual urgent care providers: seasonal allergies, colds, constipation, coughs, mild diarrhea, ear problems, pink eye, respiratory problems, sore throat, urinary tract infectionsflu symptoms, headache, nausea, and short-term vomiting.

When an In-Person Doctor Visit Is Better If you have a serious health problem that is likely to require a physical exam, lab test, X-rays or other scans, or other procedures, you will need to make an in-person appointment.

When to Get Emergency Help Call 911 right away if you think you or someone else is having a medical emergency, the American College of Emergency Physicians recommends. Medical emergencies include, but aren’t limited to: broken bones, choking, stopped breathing, heavy bleeding, severe pain, head injuries with dizziness or confusion or loss of consciousness, serious burns, deep wounds, high fever, allergic reactions that include swelling and breathing trouble, heart attack symptoms (chest pain or discomfort, pain in the arm or jaw), or stroke symptoms (weakness or drooping on one side of body, trouble speaking, sudden inability to see, speak, walk, or move).

Additional reporting by Brian P. Dunleavy.