Litcius/Paper detail

Use of Telehealth in Mental Health (MH) Services During and After COVID-19

Todd Molfenter, Thomasine Heitkamp, Ann Murphy, Stephanie Tapscott, Stephanie Behlman, Olivia Cody

2021Community Mental Health Journal103 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

COVID-19 social distancing guidelines caused a rapid transition to telephone and video technologies for the delivery of mental health (MH) services. The study examined: (a) adoption of these technologies across the MH service continuum; (b) acceptance of these technologies; and (c) intention of providers to use these technologies following the pandemic based on a sample of 327 MH organizations from 22 states during May-August 2020. There was widespread use of technology, with greater than 69% of organizations reporting using telephone or video for most services. For all video services and just three telephone services, organizations reported significantly greater odds of intending to use technology to deliver services post-COVID-19. Use of video was seen as more desirable as compared to telephone. The overall perceived ease of use and usefulness for video-based services and certain telephone services provide a promising outlook for use of these services post the COVID-19 pandemic.

Topics & Concepts

TelehealthMental healthVideoconferencingTelemedicineSocial distanceOddsPandemicCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)TelepsychiatryService (business)Service providerBusinessMedicineInternet privacyHealth careMarketingTelecommunicationsPsychiatryComputer sciencePolitical scienceInternal medicineDiseasePathologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)LawLogistic regressionTelemedicine and Telehealth ImplementationDigital Mental Health InterventionsMobile Health and mHealth Applications