Virtual care has become a foundational part of modern employer health strategies. What began as a convenience offering often focused on urgent care visits has evolved into something far broader.
Today’s virtual care programs can include:
As these services expand, employers and health benefits leaders are increasingly evaluating how virtual care should be delivered.
One question surfaces frequently:
Should virtual care be embedded within a health plan — or delivered through an independent virtual care partner?
Both approaches can provide value. But they offer different advantages depending on an employer’s goals.
Many carriers now offer virtual care services directly within their health plans.
For employers, this approach can feel simple. Embedded solutions often promise streamlined contracting, direct alignment with claims systems, and a familiar vendor relationship.
In some cases, this structure works well for organizations seeking basic access to telehealth services. However, embedded programs are typically designed to operate within the broader health plan structure. Because they sit inside the claims ecosystem, their primary role is often to help members navigate care after the claims process has already begun, rather than preventing the need for care in the first place. This can influence how quickly services evolve, how data is reported, and how additional services are integrated into the broader benefits strategy.
Some of the common limitations of embedded virtual care models include:
As virtual care becomes more central to employee health strategies, these factors are increasingly part of the evaluation process.
In contrast, independent virtual care partners often focus on preventing downstream utilization by embedding primary care, behavioral health, and coaching earlier in the care journey. When employees have easy access to care before conditions escalate, organizations may see fewer downstream claims and stronger long-term health outcomes.
Independent virtual care providers operate on top of the health plan rather than inside it. This model allows greater flexibility in how services are delivered and integrated, enabling a dedicated virtual care partner to focus on care delivery, engagement, and coordination across services.
For employers and benefits consultants, this can provide several advantages:
By shifting care earlier in the process, independent virtual care models aim to reduce how often employees need to enter the claims system at all — not just manage what happens once they do.
For example, rising demand for GLP-1 medications has introduced a new complexity for employer health plans. When weight management support exists independently from primary care or behavioral support, outcomes may vary widely.
Within an integrated virtual care model, treatment pathways can include clinical oversight, coaching, and nutritional support — helping employees focus on long-term metabolic health rather than short-term results.
When comparing embedded and independent virtual care approaches, benefits leaders often focus on several key questions:
These questions help shift the conversation away from access alone and toward outcomes.
Virtual care is no longer a supplemental benefit. For many employers, it has become a central part of their employee benefits strategy.
Whether embedded within a health plan or delivered through an independent virtual care partner, the goal remains the same: Improve access to care while supporting long-term health outcomes and responsible cost management.
Organizations that take a strategic approach to evaluating virtual care models are better positioned to build benefits programs that evolve alongside workforce needs.
Because in today’s healthcare landscape, the most effective solutions are not defined by where they sit in the benefits structure, but by how well they work together.
Discover how integrated virtual care can strengthen your benefits strategy.
Explore First Stop Health’s virtual care services.
Embedded virtual care is typically included within a health plan and operates through the claims system. Independent virtual care is offered by a separate partner and focuses on providing care earlier, often before a claim is generated. The key difference is whether care is primarily reactive within the plan or proactive alongside it.
Utilization varies widely depending on how easy the program is to access and how well it is integrated into the overall benefits experience. Programs that offer simple access, consistent communication, and multiple care services in one place tend to see higher engagement compared to point solutions or optional add-ons.
Virtual care can help reduce costs when it supports early intervention, ongoing care management, and prevention. When employees address health concerns before they escalate, organizations may see fewer emergency visits, better chronic condition control, and lower overall healthcare spending over time.