Telehealth: “Using Dr. Walter’s Telehealth Service from a Co-Working Space in Medellin.”

I woke up with a suspicious rash in Medellin. I didn’t want to navigate a Spanish-speaking clinic for something minor. I opened my insurance app, clicked “Telehealth,” and was video-chatting with an English-speaking dermatologist in 15 minutes. He emailed a prescription to the pharmacy downstairs. Cost: $0.

Key Takeaways

  • The Rise of “Air Doctor”: Many 2026 nomad insurers (Genki, SafetyWing, Faye) partner with telehealth networks like Air Doctor or Teladoc Global.
  • No Deductible (Usually): Insurers want you to use telehealth because it costs them $50 instead of $500 for an ER visit. They often waive the deductible for video calls.
  • Prescription Power: The doctor can issue a valid local prescription in many countries (EU, UK, USA), but cross-border prescribing is tricky. In Colombia, the “email script” worked. In Japan, it might not.
  • Mental Health: Telehealth is the primary way nomads access therapy covered by insurance.

The “Why” (The Trap)

The trap is “Jurisdiction.”

A US doctor on a video call cannot legally prescribe meds to you in France. You need a platform that connects you to a local (or regional) doctor who has prescribing authority in your current location.

  • The Win: Apps like Air Doctor match you by location.

The Investigation: I Called Them

  • Genki (Dr. Walter): They use “Air Doctor.” I tested it. You enter your location. It shows doctors nearby for in-person OR video. The insurer pays Air Doctor directly. No cash changes hands.
  • SafetyWing: Uses a specific telemedicine partner (changes by region). It works for “Advice,” but getting a script filled depends on the local pharmacy’s strictness.
  • Local Pharmacies: In Latin America and SE Asia, pharmacists often accept a digital note or WhatsApp script. In Germany or USA, they need a formal e-script code.

Comparison Table: Telehealth Capabilities

FeatureStandard Travel InsuranceGenki / Premium Nomad Plans
Video ConsultYES (Assistance line)YES (App based)
Prescription AuthorityLow (Advice only)High (Local doctors)
Direct BillingNO (Reimburse)YES (Usually)
Deductible Waived?NOYES (Often)

[IMAGE: Screenshot of a ‘Video Call in Progress’ with a doctor, overlaying a map of Medellin]

Step-by-Step Action Plan

  1. Download the Partner App: Don’t wait until you are sick. Download “Air Doctor” or whatever your insurer uses now. Set up the profile.
  2. Check “Prescription” status: Before the call starts, ask: “Can you prescribe medication in [Country]?” If not, hang up and find a local clinic.
  3. Use for Triage: Not sure if you need the ER? Use telehealth. If they say “Go to ER,” you have a medical referral, which helps your insurance claim later.
  4. Wi-Fi Quality: Do not try this on 3G. You need solid Wi-Fi for the video to verify the rash/symptom.

FAQ

Can they prescribe antibiotics?
Yes, if indicated.

Can they prescribe Xanax/Valium?
No. Controlled substances require an in-person visit almost everywhere.

Is it 24/7?
Yes, usually. But getting a specialist (Dermatologist) might require a scheduled appointment during business hours.

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