In collaboration with Yale Medicine, Yale New Haven Health offers the innovation and convenience of telehealth visits with many of our providers, including specialists. You can connect with your clinician via audio or video, through your phone, tablet or computer. On a live telehealth visit, our doctors can access your electronic medical records, examine and prescribe treatments and conduct follow-up visits.
All Yale New Haven Health patients can use a secure MyChart app to connect with their provider. Our electronic medical records system, called Epic, helps support these video visits. All video visits are secure and meet the federal government’s HIPAA privacy requirements and consultations and visits are not recorded.
Instructions on how to download the MyChart app to your phone (Android)
Instructions on how to download the MyChart app to your phone (IOS)
MyChart Technical Support Line for all MyChart Questions, including Ambulatory Video Visits: 475-246-8041
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Talk to our local providers from the comfort of your home, day or night, for fast answers and treatment. Our professional and friendly staff can help with a wide range of non-life-threatening illnesses and injuries.
Learn more about 24/7 Virtual CareVideo visits – sometimes called telemedicine – allow you to receive health care and services from your provider who is in a different location.
Yes, your personal and health information is safe. Our current solution for video visits meets the same HIPAA requirements that are used for in-person visits.
Telehealth refers to the broad category of electronic telecommunications technologies, including things like smartphone apps, while telemedicine is specific to remote doctor-patient services.
Yes. New patients can have a video visit, however, not all conditions are clinically appropriate for treatment via a video visit.
Pediatricians and specialists at Yale New Haven Health are also seeing young patients through video visits. If your child’s age is 13 years or older, you will need to gain access to the child’s medical record as a parent/guardian. Even with access, some information for patients aged 13-17 is restricted for reasons of privacy. However, there are certain situations in which a parent/guardian of a patient aged 13-17 has full access.
Before an appointment, a parent will have to download the MyChart app, as well as the Zoom app, which are used to connect with their child’s provider. During the call, the parent and child must be present on the video. The parent can ask any questions they may have. If a child needs to see multiple providers, they can conference in to the same telehealth visit.
The types of appointments that can be done via video include some new patient visits, follow-up visits, post-operation visits, visits to manage your medications, and ongoing health conditions and education.
Research has shown that video visits have similar diagnostic accuracy as face-to-face visits. This means that doctors can determine what is going on with you about as well as if they saw you in person. Video visits have also been shown in research to have similar treatment outcomes as well as a potential decrease in hospitalization.
Call your doctor’s office to request a video visit.
The day before your video visit, open the MyChart app and complete the eCheck-In process. You should also prepare any questions to ask your provider. On the day of your video visit, fifteen minutes before your appointment time, log into the MyChart app. Select your appointment and tap “Begin Visit”. Your provider will join the video visit shortly thereafter. In some cases, your first contact may be with a clinical assistant who will review basic medical information before transferring you to your provider.
Physicians across the Yale New Haven Health System have been relying on Telehealth services to stay connected with their patients. Video visits are billed for the same amount as an in-person visit and many insurance companies are currently accepting those claims. These wills will have the similar cost-share to you as an in-person visit. Be sure to check with your insurance company if you have any questions about how your Telehealth visit will be billed.
You can use a smartphone, tablet (iPhone, iPad or Android device), or PC/MAC or Laptop to connect to your provider. You will also need an active MyChart account and to download the MyChart app, as well as the Zoom app for the visit.
At Yale New Haven Health and Yale Medicine, patients need to have an active MyChart account and access to the MyChart App on their personal device to access the video visit.
MyChart is a patient portal through Epic, an electronic medical record platform that gives you access to your medical record. Through MyChart you can communicate with your provider, see test results, medications, request proxy access, complete questionnaires, request prescription refills, and perform other tasks to help manage and receive information about your health.
Reach out to your provider’s office and they can send you a text link to enroll in MyChart and download the app. Alternatively, you can visit the YNHHS/YM MyChart website and click on the “Sign Up Now” button. At the next screen select “Request Access Code” and complete the enrollment screens. We use a 3rd party called Experian to validate your identity as part of the process.
Yes. A provider can assess symptoms and make medical decisions via a video visit, including sending a prescription electronically to your pharmacy. However, there are certain classes of drugs that cannot be prescribed during a video visit.
Yes, interpreter services are available during a video visit, same as with an in-person appointment.
You will receive a copy of your After Visit Summary (AVS) via MyChart. The AVS summarizes what happened during your visit and contains important follow-up instructions. You can also message your provider through MyChart.
Yes, a phone visit and/or in-person visit are always options, but speak to your clinician on what maybe clinically best to meet your needs.
This state-of-the-art service delivers expert care to all Yale New Haven Health patients 24/7. Neurologists with Yale New Haven Hospital’s Stroke Center use video conferencing and image sharing to examine patients at other hospitals, diagnose their condition, and work with physicians at those hospitals to recommend a care plan.
InSight Tele-ICU provides an extra level of care for patients in intensive care units (ICUs) at YNHHS hospitals and other participating hospitals.
Experienced critical-care physicians and nurses work in the InSight Clinical Center in New Haven. From there, clinicians use computers and other technology to monitor ICU patients’ vital signs, including blood pressure and heart rate, and review patients’ electronic medical records for test results and other information. If the InSight physician or nurse sees a patient’s condition deteriorating, he or she can contact physicians and nurses at the hospital and work with them to provide treatment. This service does not replace bedside doctors and nurses; both teams work together to care for patients.
Yale New Haven Health is proud to be affiliated with the prestigious Yale University and its highly ranked Yale School of Medicine.