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As the COVID‐19 pandemic grows internationally, healthcare systems are dramatically altering healthcare delivery, shifting as many services as quickly as possible to telemedicine. Telemedicine has been heralded 1 as a primary way to forward triage and screen potentially early symptoms of COVID‐19, protecting patients, providers, and the community from additional exposure. But now, health systems and clinics across the world are additionally rapidly deploying a telemedicine approach for primary care, mental health, OBGYN, and many other outpatient specialty appointments to reduce exposure risk. Relegated for many years to the fringe of routine healthcare delivery, with only 15.4% of physicians working in practices that use telemedicine for patient interactions, 2 it is now being thrust into mainstream healthcare through a crisis of medical necessity. It is no hyperbole to say that a literal revolution in healthcare delivery is at hand. Telemedicine's future is now; its value is no longer a matter of debate and the times demand that the broader medical field finally take telemedicine seriously as a viable and enduring component of healthcare service, training, and policy. The global COVID‐19 pandemic underscores not only the potential of telemedicine to reach patients unable to attend their medical appointments in person, but also its absolute necessity as an integral form of healthcare delivery and the surmountable nature of many previously noted barriers to...