It's 8:47 a.m. Your front desk coordinator just scheduled eight telehealth visits for the morning block.
The phone rings. A patient can't find the FollowMyHealth app in her app store.
Two minutes later, another one calls. He can't remember his portal password.
By 9:15, your staff member has walked three patients through app downloads, reset two logins, and coached one older patient through her microphone settings. The first provider is now running 12 minutes behind.
No one has actually started a visit yet.
This is the silent tax of the Veradigm EHR staff telehealth workflow video visit setup text problem. Your EHR is doing exactly what it was built to do. Your portal is working.
And yet your team is burning hours every week on tech support calls that happen before care even starts.
It sounds simple. It isn't.
Most medical practice staff video visit troubleshooting Veradigm issues don't come from the software itself.
They come from the gap between a patient who wants a quick virtual visit and a portal that expects them to enroll, remember credentials, and install something new.
Think about the math for a moment.
If your team handles 50 telehealth visits per week, and each one eats 10β15 minutes of pre-visit troubleshooting, you're losing 8 to 12 staff hours weekly. That's a full shift. Every week.
There's a cleaner way to run this.
One that keeps your Veradigm EHR at the center of the workflow but removes the app barrier entirely. Let's walk through why today's setup fails, and what a text-first alternative looks like in practice.
FollowMyHealth is a strong platform for patients who are already enrolled. It handles scheduling, records, messaging, and video in one place. Your IT team made a smart call years ago when they picked it.
But here's the catch.
Portal adoption across ambulatory practices sits somewhere between 20% and 35%.
That means two out of every three patients you serve haven't enrolled, haven't downloaded the app, and likely never will.
So when your staff schedule a virtual appointment in Veradigm, they're not really booking a telehealth visit. They're booking a telehealth visit plus an onboarding session.
Picture your morning.
A patient is booked for a 9:30 video visit. At 9:15, she calls in. She can't find the app. You guide her through the app store. She finds it, downloads it, then hits a login screen she doesn't remember creating.
You reset her password. She logs in. The video test fails because her microphone is muted at the system level.
It's now 9:35. The provider is waiting. The next patient is already in a queue behind her. Your staff member is five minutes from her first bathroom break of the day and she's been on the phone since 8:50.
Multiply this by three or four patients a morning. That's the reality of telehealth staff workflow burden across most mid-market practices today β aligning with broader patient access priorities data showing ongoing strain on scheduling and front desk operations
Let's put real numbers on this. For a multi-location practice running 100 telehealth visits per week, pre-visit troubleshooting quietly eats into both staff time and revenue.
20 hours |
| Staff time lost every week to pre-visit tech support calls in a 100-visit practice. |
That's the equivalent of half a full-time employee.
Every single week. And it doesn't include the morale cost of a team that spends mornings doing tech support instead of patient care.
For every practice we see running FollowMyHealth without a text-based layer on top, a version of this cost is sitting in the schedule. It just hasn't been calculated yet.
Some practices try to fix this by sending portal reminder emails a day before the visit.
Others assign one staff member as the "telehealth concierge." A few have even built printable one-page guides for patients.
These help a little. They don't fix the core issue.
20β35% |
| Typical patient portal adoption rate across ambulatory practices. The other two-thirds of your panel will never enroll, no matter how many reminders you send. |
The core issue is that the patient is still being asked to download an app, make an account, and test hardware before a visit that should take 15 minutes β despite industry-wide investments in patient engagement capabilities that havenβt translated into consistent patient adoption
No amount of documentation changes that friction β especially for:
Even your best-written guide can't walk a patient through all three barriers in real time. You need a different on-ramp β one that meets patients where they already are.
Here's the alternative flow with Curogram.
Your staff schedule the telehealth appointment in Veradigm EHR just like they do today. That appointment data syncs to Curogram through the open API.
At the right moment, the patient gets a text. One message. One link.
They tap it. A HIPAA-compliant video call opens in their browser. No app download. No portal login. No password to remember.
That's the full telehealth patient onboarding staff time EHR flow, compressed into a single tap.
Nearly every modern smartphone has a browser that can handle secure video. Nothing to install. Nothing to update. The patient goes from text to face-to-face with their provider in under 30 seconds.
For patients, it feels like clicking any other link in a text. For your staff, the pre-visit support call just⦠disappears.
This is the Veradigm video visit staff setup automation model. Instead of training every patient to use a portal, you meet them where they already are β in their messages app.
This isn't a rip-and-replace. For patients who love FollowMyHealth and actively use it, nothing changes. Keep that experience.
For the 60β80% of your panel who never enrolled, Curogram's text-first approach reaches them without asking them to join anything new.
Portal for the 30% who want it. Text for the 70% who don't. Full coverage, no duplication.
Here's the simple version of the front desk telehealth scheduling text link workflow:
Your team never leaves the workflow they already know. No double data entry. No switching between dashboards.
If you manage multiple clinics, the same setup deploys across every location at once.
Staff can see confirmation status before the appointment window opens. If a patient hasn't confirmed by 24 hours out, your team knows exactly who to follow up with β and the follow-up is another text, not another phone call.
This turns no-show management from a guessing game into a visible, trackable queue.
The video infrastructure is HIPAA-compliant by design. All transmissions are encrypted end-to-end.
Curogram signs a Business Associate Agreement with every practice.
The text message itself only contains the appointment time and a unique, secure video link. No names, no diagnoses, no chart notes.
That keeps the SMS layer low-risk from a compliance standpoint while still giving patients a one-tap experience.
Practices using text-based appointment confirmations with embedded video links typically see confirmation rates above 75%.
No-show rates drop from the 10β15% range down to under 7%.
53% lower no-shows |
| Text-first telehealth practices run no-show rates 53% below the industry average for virtual visits. |
For context, that's 53% lower than the industry average for virtual visits.
In real terms, a practice doing 100 video visits per week reclaims around 5 additional completed visits every week just from the no-show reduction alone.
Take that same 100-visit practice. Cutting pre-visit support from 12 minutes per patient down to near zero returns about 20 staff hours per week.
That's the equivalent of half a full-time employee β freed up for work that actually moves the practice forward:
For your team, it means mornings don't start in crisis mode. For your patients, it means the visit actually starts on time.
Here's a clean way to think about it.
Fewer no-shows means more completed visits. More completed visits means more billable encounters.
Fewer support calls means lower staff cost per visit.
$60,000+ per year |
| Combined annual impact for a 100-visit-per-week practice β from recovered revenue, reduced no-shows, and staff hours redirected to real clinical work. |
Stack those three effects on a 100-visit-per-week practice, and the annual impact lands somewhere north of $60,000 in recovered revenue and cost savings. Practices with more locations compound that figure across every site.
This is why the shift isn't really about telehealth. It's about unlocking operational capacity your team already has.
Your Veradigm EHR was designed for clinical workflows. FollowMyHealth was designed for patients who want a full digital experience.
Neither of them was designed for the moment when your front desk has to troubleshoot an app download five minutes before a visit.
That gap is where operational hours disappear. And that gap is exactly what a text-first layer is built to close.
When the pre-visit tech support call goes away, your team stops being technical support and goes back to being clinical support. That's a different practice.
A calmer one. A faster one. One where the first patient of the day gets the same attention as the last.
For pediatric clinics juggling parents with toddlers on their laps, geriatric practices serving patients who don't use smartphones often, and subspecialty groups running tight back-to-back schedules β the same principle applies.
Remove the app barrier and virtual care actually works for everyone on your panel, not just the tech-savvy few.
If your staff are spending 10 or more hours a week helping patients access video visits, the math is already on your side.
A text-first layer pays for itself inside the first month, and the downstream gains β fewer no-shows, faster starts, calmer mornings β keep compounding from there.
Start with a simple audit this week.
Ask your front desk to track pre-visit support time for five business days. Note how many calls come in, how long each one takes, and how often a scheduled visit gets cancelled because the patient couldn't get into the app.
That single number will tell you more about your Veradigm EHR staff telehealth workflow video visit setup text problem than any consultant report.
Most practices are surprised by how big it is.
You'll see how appointments sync, how the patient experience feels on a phone, and how many staff hours the switch actually frees up across your practice. If the numbers don't land for your specific volume, you'll know quickly.
Your EHR is already doing its job. Your portal is already doing its job. The missing piece is the on-ramp that meets patients in the one place they always open β their text messages.
Schedule a Demo with Curogram and we'll walk through a real multi-location telehealth flow, show you exactly where the text link replaces the pre-visit call, and map the integration points with your Veradigm setup.