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Turnkey Telehealth Review & Discussion

Turnkey Telehealth Review: Is it Worth it?

As we kick off the New Year, I seem to be getting more and more requests to cover business opportunities in a variety of industries. Turnkey Telehealth is a name I’ve heard of a few times from friends in the medical space, but I never took the time to look into them or perform a Turnkey Telehealth Review.

Plus, any of the respected entrepreneurs that I knew from Silicon Valley to New York, when asked about the company’s founder, Anthony Licausi, all had nothing but great things to say.

In fact, I was so impressed by what I heard that I felt compelled to take a closer look at the company.

So I sat through their webinar and course material, and interviewed their top executives.

In this Turnkey Telehealth Review, I will be covering:

  • What is Turnkey Telehealth?
  • Is Turnkey Telehealth a Legitimate BizOpp or a Scam?
  • Why is Turnkey Telehealth in such High Demand?
  • Who is Turnkey Telehealth for?
  • Verdict: Is Turnkey Telehealth Legitimate?

What is Turnkey Telehealth?

Anthony Licausi is the Chairman of Turnkey Telehealth which started in 2018 solely as a telehealth SaaS product and has now grown into on of the top-rated healthcare technology companies in the space (HealthcareGrader, 2023).

Turnkey Telehealth has accomplished this amazing feat through their “Clinic-in-the-Cloud” solution that can generate direct AND passive income each and every month. They even provide you with a pre-formatted and customizable financial model that spells out specifically how you can net ~$400 per hour over the next 12 months.

Too good to be true? Not when some of their current clients are supposedly pocketing $5-, $10-, even $20,000+ per month, working where and when they want. Read on for our full Turnkey Telehealth review.

Is Turnkey Telehealth a Legitimate BizOpp or a Scam?

I can undoubtedly say that NO, Turnkey Telehealth is NOT a scam. In fact, it’s the most legitimate business opportunity I’ve seen in the healthcare industry. Unlike other telehealth opportunities you may have seen in the past, Turnkey Telehealth will give you all of the resources and training you need to operate your Virtual Clinic, known as their Clinic-in-the-Cloud™ system.

“We’ve already done this for dozens of medical professionals, from nurse practitioners to anesthesiologists and everyone in between” says their marketing director, Rohit Pandya. “One of our clients billed more than $16,000 worth of visits in just the first six weeks. Another one billed out $10,000 in the first month. And another one billed a little over $44,000 in the first three months. That clinic has already seen an ROI of almost 9x over the original startup cost.”

Rohit continues, “Getting ahead in today’s world is competing with the costs of living thanks to massive inflation. Every month, the price of everything is rising to levels we haven’t seen in 40 years. The expenses alone can cripple your finances and make life difficult, like saving more money or affording the things you want. Traditional investments aren’t doing much better either. The stock market is down and high interest rates are making real estate a losing proposition right now.”

Why is Turnkey Telehealth in such High Demand?

The pandemic forced us inside our homes and made us do everything online. From ordering food and goods to seeing our healthcare providers- and we all got used to it. Patients quickly realized that clicking a few buttons from the couch and having a medical professional show up on their smartphone sure beats dealing with a packed waiting room of sick people.

This is a trend that is here to stay and is very likely to grow tremendously over the coming years. I think we can all agree on that. This is exactly the reason why the team at Turnkey Telehealth believes now is a better time than ever to open up your own Virtual Clinic. Especially when it can be done for a fraction of a percentage of opening up an actual brick and mortar location.

“Ask any doctor or mid-level provider who has opened their own clinic in a physical location- they’ve spent well over $500k and many times they’ve spent into the millions. Telehealth has made it possible to earn the same rewards for 1% of the risk you would take on with brick and mortar.” says Anthony Licausi, Chairman of Turnkey Telehealth.

Who is Turnkey Telehealth for?

He goes on to say “We had an amazing 2023 and we’re gearing up for 2024 by opening the doors to another round of healthcare providers who want to get paid what they’re worth by opening their own Virtual Clinics.” Anthony continues “this way they can collect direct deposits every single month while we handle all the hard work. It’s important that I mention, as wonderful as this opportunity is, it is NOT for everyone. We are looking for a specific type of provider. One that’s willing to play the long game; someone who’s willing to make an investment into themselves and their Virtual Clinic. Someone who is coachable, that has an entrepreneurial spirit and doesn’t give up.”

For those of you who aren’t ready to launch your own practice just yet, Turnkey Telehealth has their PracticeBuilderPRO Academy. It has a treasure trove of learning modules including written content and video modules to help you understand more about business, marketing and more. They even have personal development courses to help you strengthen yourself as an entrepreneur. And all of this is available for less than what you spend on coffee and/or going out to eat.

Verdict- is Turnkey Telehealth Legitimate?

YES! Turnkey Telehealth is one of the MOST legitimate business opportunities I’ve seen in a long time- and I don’t just mean telehealth. There are so many money-making schemes out there. From Amazon FBA to Facebook Ad Agencies, it’s becoming harder and harder to separate what’s real and what’s not.

Just the sheer amount of educational resources alone offered by Turnkey Telehealth will at the very least, leave you a better, sharper healthcare practitioner that is smarter than many of your peers and colleagues.

Turnkey Telehealth recognizes that many healthcare providers are scientists and not MBAs. For you business oriented people out there looking to get on a fast-track, you can hire other practitioners to work for you. You can even open up multiple locations and/or multiple states. You can expand into brick and mortar if you’d like, and Turnkey Telehealth will help you with the entire process.

If you need capital for expansion, they’ll help you apply for some of the best business credit cards that are out there. They will also introduce you to their banking partner, a NYSE publicly traded bank that specializes in working with healthcare professionals.

Ideally, you’d reinvest any profit you make back into the business for the first year. Remember that you are building an asset that you could sell for a multiple one day. The M&A team at Turnkey Telehealth will even help you conduct the sale when the time is right. With all of the telehealth companies I’ve seen popping up over the past year, Turnkey Telehealth has something truly unique. And nobody else in the marketplace seems to have.

It’s not a simple job where you clock in and out. It requires some hard work and dedication to build. But with the team and all of the resources provided by Turnkey Telehealth, there is no reason why someone with a little faith in themselves and a license to practice healthcare couldn’t execute on this. Not to mention build something incredible for themselves and their family.

Isaiah Zubri is the author of this Turnkey Telehealth Review. He is a freelance writer out of Minneapolis, MN and enjoys writing about healthcare, technology and business. He has two dogs and a goldfish.

Telehealth Was Key During the Pandemic; Providers Want It To Stay

There’s a new mantra for medical care.

“Telehealth is here to stay,” providers and hospital administrators repeatedly said last week during a webinar presenting qualitative research on telehealth in Kansas. 

The research, gathered by the United Methodist Health Ministry Fund and REACH Healthcare Foundation, found that 86% of Kansans support expanding or maintaining telehealth access after the pandemic ends. 

Telehealth allows a patient to take an appointment from their home, via video or even telephone call. It was crucial during the pandemic as folks sought to minimize exposure to COVID-19. But in the past three years, providers and patients have found telehealth to be useful outside of times of medical crisis and a global pandemic. 

Even as today’s public health emergencies fade, health care experts and providers are pushing for telehealth policies that will allow folks to continue accessing quality care. 

Expanded Use 

David Jordan, president and CEO of United Methodist Health Ministry Fund, said before the start of the pandemic, 11% of Americans had used telehealth. 

Outline of the state of Kansas with "86%" in the middle. Text reads: of Kansans say they support expanding or maintaining telehealth options after the pandemic ends.
Kansas voters and physicians want telehealth to remain an accessible form of healthcare. (United Methodist Health Ministry Fund)

The American Psychiatric Association found that number to be much higher, almost 40%, in May of 2021. 

Jordan explained that telehealth could be used on a much larger scale due to policy changes implemented during public health emergencies. 

These changes allowed patients and providers to take telehealth calls from home, on their own devices, sometimes over the phone (versus video call) and made sure providers were compensated at the same rates for in-person and telehealth appointments.

“This change made it very favorable to make it easier for both patients and providers to deliver, and access, health care via telehealth,” Jordan said. 

Read more…

Telehealth Start-Ups and Pregnancy Care

The goal of Poppy Seed Health is to connect underserved pregnant women to nurses, midwives and doulas who can offer on-demand assistance.

Simmone Taitt had a romanticized notion of her journey to motherhood — ups and downs, sure, but an overall beautiful experience. Then she had a miscarriage. What happened next changed the way she thought about compassionate health care, and inspired her to found a start-up, Poppy Seed Health, that aimed to support women the way she wished she had been supported.

According to Ms. Taitt, during a prenatal appointment the doctor couldn’t find a heartbeat. She “looked at me and said that my body had terminated the pregnancy, which was a dagger to the heart,” she said. “‘It’s normal and happens all the time,’” Mrs. Taitt recalls the doctor saying. “‘I will see you in a few months when you start trying again’ — and she left the room.”

That was the extent of the support Ms. Taitt received. “I gathered my things,” she said. “I was crying. I was devastated, and that was the most emotionally insensitive and shocking thing for me to hear.”

That would not be Ms. Taitt’s only miscarriage, and the pattern that emerged would propel her to take action: She didn’t want another pregnant person to endure the highs and lows of pregnancy and not feel supported. And so she founded Poppy Seed, which offers an app that connects pregnant women to on-demand support from nurses, midwives and doulas. These providers don’t offer medical advice, as Poppy Seed’s website notes, but Ms. Taitt believes their timely counseling offers a host of other benefits.

The company, based in New York City, now has about two dozen employees. The app has 400 users who collectively have logged about 50,000 hours of use, according to Ms. Taitt.

Read more…

MDLIVE: Your Doctor Will See You Now – via Skype.

MDLIVE provides solutions for non-emergency conditions, pediatric, dermatologic and mental health issues through the largest network of providers in the US. Looking after the needs of 27 million users nationwide, it offers patient-to-doctor distant visits via mobile devices, using an online video call system built on Skype. The Florida-based private telehealth service is a great option for people who, due to their location, don’t have access to the provider they would need, or their lifestyles make them too busy to visit a health practitioner. Offering cost-effective medical care tailored to the patient’s personal needs and health insurance plan, MDLIVE is in contract with Board Certified doctors and consultants who are registered and trained by the National Committee for Quality Assurance and the American Telemedicine Association. The providers are also verified by the National Physician Database and the American Medical Association.

MDLIVE claims to ensure discreet, safe, fast and effective healthcare, delivered at home or on the go. They also offer writing and sending prescriptions to your pharmacy of choice (if advised by the doctor). Sounds just about perfect – now let’s talk about expenses.
MDLIVE advertise their service as affordable, quality care which also helps you save on traveling to the doctor’s office. Looking at their price range, it indeed seems budget-friendly: according to their website, MDLIVE offers treatment for over 50 routine medical conditions starting from $75 or less, psychiatric care for an initial fee of $259 (with follow-up visits costing $99), and dermatology starting from 69$ or less. The company also provides counseling, dealing with a variety of issues from addictions to LGBTQ support, at a price point of $99 or less. Prices vary depending on the patient’s insurance. The idea behind MDLIVE is to offer revolutionary remote access to instant, convenient and high-quality medical care which doesn’t break the bank. The company also keeps the protection of personal data a priority which is essential in healthcare.

So how does it work? Signing up and activating an account is completely free and easy-to-do via their website, phone or MDLIVE’s free mobile app (for iOS and Android). The patient only has to pay following the visit, providing their credit card information. Through their app, MDLIVE also rethought the definition of a health assistant, using a virtual employee called Sophie, who helps to inform the patient while enhancing user experience. What we must mention, however, is that MDLIVE (or any telemedicine platform) cannot substitute your primary care doctor or any emergency care; in case of a life-threatening emergency, please dial 911 immediately.

Having listed all the claims and promises, we also have looked at customer reviews. On Glassdoor, MDLIVE has three stars out of five, many of the reviews claiming that although the professionalism of the medical staff isn’t to be questioned, the work ethics of the executive team and managers definitely don’t suit such a company. Some reviewers (including former employees) mentioned the lack of innovation when it comes to the technologies used by the service. Therefore we believe that, although the concept of MDLIVE is based on great ideas, the execution itself should be further improved and developed to ensure a top place for the company on such an ever-growing market.