New Fiber Broadband Association Paper Examines Fiber as the Foundation for Telehealth
New Fiber Broadband Association Paper Examines Fiber as the Foundation for Telehealth
Paper outlines why reliable, high-capacity fiber broadband is essential to delivering modern, equitable healthcare
WASHINGTON, D.C.— (March 5, 2026)—The Fiber Broadband Association (FBA) today released a new paper, The Infrastructure Behind Telehealth: Why Fiber Networks Matter for Modern Healthcare, examining how reliable, high-capacity fiber broadband has become essential to delivering effective, equitable telehealth services across North America.
Telehealth has evolved from a supplemental offering into a core component of modern healthcare delivery, supporting everything from routine and behavioral health visits to chronic disease management and specialty care. As virtual care continues to scale, the paper finds that network performance—not just broadband availability—plays a defining role in determining care quality, reliability, and patient access.
“Telehealth depends on consistent, low-latency, high-quality connectivity that can support real-time video, diagnostics, and continuous data flows,” said Deborah Kish, Vice President of Research & Workforce Development at FBA. “Our research shows that fiber broadband delivers the reliability and scalability healthcare providers need to confidently expand virtual care, particularly in rural and underserved communities.”
The paper highlights several key drivers behind sustained telehealth growth, including provider shortages, rising patient expectations for on-demand digital care, and the expansion of advanced applications such as remote patient monitoring, high-definition imaging, and emerging extended reality (XR) tools. These data-intensive services place increasing demands on broadband networks, reinforcing fiber’s role as the only technology capable of supporting clinical-grade telehealth at scale.
Drawing on FBA research and third-party studies, the paper outlines how fiber-enabled communities experience improved care continuity, reduced travel burdens for patients, and stronger provider collaboration. The paper also addresses challenges that remain, including broadband gaps in rural and Tribal areas, affordability concerns, and digital literacy barriers, emphasizing that infrastructure investment must be paired with coordinated efforts among providers, policymakers, and community leaders to fully realize telehealth’s potential.
These topics will be further explored at Fiber Connect 2026, taking place May 17-20 at the Gaylord Palms Resort in Orlando, Florida. Telehealth- and healthcare-focused programming includes the Telehealth & Broadband Summit: A Byte a Day Keeps the Doctor Away on Tuesday, May 19, which will examine how fiber broadband enables better health outcomes, supports aging in place, and connects communities with medical experts beyond their local geography.
Additional healthcare-related discussions will take place throughout the event, including the Women of Fiber Connect Luncheon featuring leaders from the YMCA of the USA and the National Council on Aging, highlighting the intersection of connectivity, community health, and aging populations.
Fiber Connect 2026 will bring together broadband leaders, policymakers, healthcare stakeholders, and community advocates to explore how fiber infrastructure supports not only telehealth, but broader economic vitality and quality of life. Learn more and register here. Subscribe to FBA’s Fiber Forward Weekly newsletter here to stay updated on the latest industry news.

