Telehealth visits for pets? Ohio Senate votes 33-0 to let veterinarians add service

Despite the rainy weather, The Oregon District’s 7th annual Derby Day Running of the Wieners happened on Saturday, May 3, 2025. Hosted by The Oregon District Business Association, proceeds from the wiener dog race registration fee went to benefit the Human Society of Greater Dayton and Miami Valley Pit Crew. TOM GILLIAM / CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Credit: Tom Gilliam

Credit: Tom Gilliam

Despite the rainy weather, The Oregon District’s 7th annual Derby Day Running of the Wieners happened on Saturday, May 3, 2025. Hosted by The Oregon District Business Association, proceeds from the wiener dog race registration fee went to benefit the Human Society of Greater Dayton and Miami Valley Pit Crew. TOM GILLIAM / CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Ohio veterinarians are one step closer to being cleared to hold telehealth consultations under state law following the Senate’s 33-0 vote this week.

Senate Bill 60, joint sponsored by local Sen. Steve Huffman, R-Tipp City, will now head to the Ohio House for further consideration.

Huffman, a physician, told this outlet in January that he wanted to modernize the state’s guidelines on veterinary medicine after seeing the benefits of telehealth in the medical field.

“You know, it became very rapid and very successful in medicine because of COVID,” Huffman said. “And to me, it sped up (progress); what was going to happen within 10 years we did within one year.”

He noted that veterinary telehealth visits, which currently are not permitted under Ohio law, could benefit Ohioans, particularly the elderly, who might “find it hard to get your cat to the veterinarian.”

In committee testimony, the bill received both support and opposition from individual vets and clinics, with detractors like veterinarian Andrea Miller concerned that “virtual care cannot replicate in-person evaluations.”

“As a practicing veterinarian, I’ve encountered countless cases where verbal symptom descriptions pointed to one diagnosis, but physical examination revealed a different condition — or multiple concurrent problems,“ Miller told the Senate Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee in May.


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Avery Kreemer can be reached at 614-981-1422, on X, via email, or you can drop him a comment/tip with the survey below.

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