| Literature DB >> 32931440 |
Shannon E Reilly1, Katherine L Zane1, William T McCuddy1, Zachary A Soulliard1, David M Scarisbrick1,2,3, Liv E Miller1,2,3, James J Mahoney Iii1,2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic has been associated with increased psychological distress, signaling the need for increased mental health services in the context of stay-at-home policies.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; clinical practice; mental health; survey; tele–mental health
Year: 2020 PMID: 32931440 PMCID: PMC7546864 DOI: 10.2196/21237
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Ment Health ISSN: 2368-7959
Demographic characteristics of the full sample (N=903).a
| Characteristic | Participants | ||
| Age (years), mean (SD) | 39.50 (11.50) | ||
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| Man | 149 (16.50) | |
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| Woman | 749 (82.95) | |
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| Transgender man | 2 (0.22) | |
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| Genderqueer/nonconforming | 3 (0.33) | |
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| American Indian/Alaska Native | 1 (0.11) | |
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| Asian/Asian American | 29 (3.22) | |
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| Black/African American | 29 (3.22) | |
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| Hispanic/Latinx | 33 (3.67) | |
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| White | 781 (86.78) | |
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| Multiracial | 25 (2.78) | |
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| Different racial identity (ie, Arab, Jewish, Mestiza) | 2 (0.22) | |
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| Bisexual | 57 (6.34) | |
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| Gay | 24 (2.67) | |
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| Heterosexual | 762 (84.39) | |
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| Lesbian | 23 (2.56) | |
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| Queer | 20 (2.22) | |
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| Different sexual orientation (ie, asexual, fluid, pansexual, questioning) | 13 (1.44) | |
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| Midwest | 175 (19.44) | |
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| Northeast | 129 (14.33) | |
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| South | 425 (47.22) | |
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| West | 171 (19.00) | |
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| Full-time | 671 (74.31) | |
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| Part-time | 71 (7.86) | |
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| Trainee | 155 (17.17) | |
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| Not currently employed (N/Ab) | 1 (0.11) | |
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| Other (ie, as needed, independent contractor, self-employed) | 5 (0.55) | |
aThe number of respondents who did not provide information about demographic characteristics were as follows: gender (n=1), race (n=3), sexual orientation (n=4), and region (n=3).
bN/A: not applicable.
Professional characteristics of the full sample (N=903).a
| Characteristic | Participants, n (%) | |
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| Bachelor’s-level therapist/counselor | 10 (1.11) |
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| Social worker/master’s-level therapist/counselor | 153 (16.94) |
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| Psychologist/doctoral-level therapist/counselor | 367 (40.64) |
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| Neuropsychologist | 144 (15.95) |
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| Trainee (ie, graduate-level practicum student, predoctoral intern, postdoctoral fellow) | 155 (17.17) |
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| Psychiatrist | 23 (2.55) |
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| Other medical provider (eg, other physician, psychiatric nurse practitioner/physician assistant) | 12 (1.33) |
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| Support staff (eg, case manager, medical assistant, psychometrist) | 34 (3.77) |
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| Other (eg, mental health specialist, peer recovery, research project manager) | 5 (0.55) |
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| Graduate-level practicum student | 58 (6.42) |
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| Predoctoral intern | 38 (4.25) |
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| Postdoctoral fellow | 59 (6.59) |
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| Unlicensed practitioner | 38 (4.25) |
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| Licensed practitioner | 551 (61.56) |
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| Licensed practitioner and board-certified in specialty area | 117 (13.07) |
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| Not applicable (eg, support staff) | 34 (3.80) |
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| Private practice | 196 (21.73) |
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| Academic medical center | 172 (19.07) |
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| Veterans hospital or military hospital/clinic (VAb) | 90 (9.97) |
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| Community mental health setting | 70 (7.76) |
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| Psychiatric hospital or facility | 50 (5.54) |
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| General hospital | 46 (5.10) |
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| Rehabilitation hospital or setting | 35 (3.88) |
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| University counseling center | 23 (2.55) |
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| Department/graduate training clinic | 20 (2.22) |
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| Outpatient clinic | 15 (1.66) |
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| School | 9 (1.00) |
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| Primary care | 7 (0.78) |
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| Prison | 5 (0.55) |
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| Other (eg, cancer center, employee assistance program, nonprofit organization, intensive outpatient/partial hospitalization program) | 16 (1.77) |
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| Multiple practice settings | 148 (16.41) |
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| Pediatric only (ie, younger than 18 years) | 85 (9.42) |
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| Adults only (ie, 18 years and older) | 472 (52.33) |
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| Lifespan (ie, pediatrics and adults) | 345 (38.25) |
aThe number of respondents who did not provide information about professional characteristics were as follows: provider level (n=8), practice setting (n=1), and age specialty (n=1).
bVA: Veterans Affairs.
Descriptive statistics of practice adjustments, patients seen, and tele–mental health factors during COVID-19 for the full sample (N=903).
| Variables | Participants | ||
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| Tele–mental health/virtual apptsa (vs in-person) | 729 (80.82) | |
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| Rescheduling/postponing appts | 435 (48.23) | |
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| Cancelling appts | 240 (26.61) | |
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| Restrictions on appts (eg, by patient age, medical comorbidity, recent travel) | 155 (17.18) | |
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| Precautionary measures (eg, personal protective equipment, social distancing) | 53 (5.88) | |
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| Other adjustment (eg, expanding therapeutic services, education/training-related restrictions) | 38 (4.21) | |
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| N/Ab (no change in practice) | 19 (2.11) | |
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| Mean (SD) | 17.05 (12.00) |
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| Range | 0-50 |
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| Mean (SD) | 1.11 (4.66) |
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| Range | 0-50 |
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| Mean (SD) | 18.00 (13.25) |
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| Range | 0-100 |
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| Mean (SD) | 16.38 (12.02) |
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| Range | 0-50 |
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| Mean (SD) | 1.62 (5.51) |
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| Range | 0-50 |
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| Mean (SD) | 17.68 (13.26) |
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| Range | 0-100 |
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| Mean (SD) | 4.92 (9.01) |
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| Range | 0-50 |
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| Mean (SD) | 10.09 (10.75) |
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| Range | 0-50 |
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| Mean (SD) | 14.39 (14.41) |
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| Range | 0-85 |
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| Mean (SD) | 79.05 (32.01) | |
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| Range | 1-100 | |
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| Reported not implementing tele–mental health in Dec 2019c, n (%) | 625 (80.44) | |
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| Reported not implementing tele–mental health in late Feb 2020d, n (%) | 580 (75.32) | |
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| Reported not implementing tele–mental health currently, n (%) | 188 (22.07) | |
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| Reported easy access to ITe services, n (%) | 657 (72.84) | |
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| Mean (SD) | 3.46 (1.32) |
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| Range | 1-5 |
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| Mean (SD) | 3.07 (1.20) |
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| Range | 1-5 |
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| Mean (SD) | 3.57 (1.36) |
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| Range | 1-5 |
aappt: appointment.
bN/A: not applicable.
cThe valid percent is presented in the table; including missingness (14.0%), the raw value was 69.21%.
dThe valid percent is presented in the table; including missingness (14.7%), the raw value was 64.23%.
eIT: information technology.
fFive-point Likert scale (1=strongly disagree to 5=strongly agree).
gFive-point Likert scale (1=easy or not at all difficult to 5=very difficult).
hFive-point Likert scale (1=very unlikely to 5=very likely).
Results of chi-squares for practice adjustments and analyses of covariance for patients seen and tele–mental health factors during COVID-19 by provider level.
| Variables | Traineea (n=155) | Licensed practitioner (n=668) | ||
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| Tele–mental health/virtual apptsb (vs in-person) | 127 (81.94) | 546 (81.86) | .98c |
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| Rescheduling/postponing appts | 77 (49.68) | 320 (47.98) | .70c |
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| Cancelling appts | 55 (35.48) | 161 (24.14) | .004c |
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| Restrictions on appts (eg, by patient age, medical comorbidity, recent travel) | 22 (14.19) | 118 (17.69) | .30c |
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| Precautionary measures (eg, personal protective equipment, social distancing) | 8 (5.16) | 40 (6.00) | .69c |
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| Other adjustment (eg, expanding therapeutic services, education/training-related restrictions) | 6 (3.87) | 29 (4.35) | .79c |
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| N/Ad (no change in practice) | 3 (1.94) | 11 (1.65) | .80c |
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| In-person | 11.36 (0.99) | 18.49 (0.45) | <.001 |
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| Remote/tele–mental health | 0.55 (0.41) | 1.23 (0.19) | .02 |
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| Total | 11.85 (1.07) | 19.53 (0.49) | <.001 |
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| In-person | 15.95 (0.43) | 16.62 (0.19) | .04 |
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| Remote/tele–mental health | 1.49 (0.31) | 1.47 (0.14) | .62 |
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| Total | 17.23 (0.43) | 17.87 (0.19) | .048 |
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| In-person | 3.98 (0.75) | 5.00 (0.33) | .09 |
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| Remote/tele–mental health | 6.77 (0.91) | 10.87 (0.42) | <.001 |
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| Total | 13.38 (0.87) | 14.73 (0.39) | .01 |
| Percent of week working remotely, EMM (SE) | 86.26 (2.87) | 77.84 (1.46) | .03 | |
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| Reported not implementing tele–mental health in Dec 2019, n (%) | 129 (94.16) | 438 (76.04) | <.001c |
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| Reported not implementing tele–mental health in late Feb 2020, n (%) | 115 (84.56) | 411 (72.23) | .003c |
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| Reported not implementing tele–mental health currently, n (%) | 40 (27.03) | 115 (17.24) | .02c |
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| Easy access to ITf services, n (%) | 123 (79.35) | 475 (71.21) | .04c |
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| Perceived adequacy of tele–mental health training, EMM (SE) | 3.50 (0.12) | 3.48 (0.05) | .71 |
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| Difficulty with tele–mental health implementation, EMM (SE) | 3.28 (0.12) | 3.00 (0.05) | .04 |
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| Likelihood of continuing to provide tele–mental health services, EMM (SE) | 3.47 (0.12) | 3.63 (0.05) | .34 |
aTrainee includes graduate-level practicum students, predoctoral interns, and postdoctoral fellows.
bappt: appointment.
cBased on Bonferroni adjustment for chi-square tests.
dN/A: not applicable.
eEMM: estimated marginal mean.
fIT: information technology.
Results of chi-squares for practice adjustments and analyses of covariance for patients seen and tele–mental health factors during COVID-19 by provider type.
| Variables | (1) Social workers/master’s providers (n=153) | (2) Psychologists/doctoral providers (n=367) | (3) Neuropsychologists (n=144) | ||
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| Tele–mental health/virtual apptsa (vs in-person) | 133 (86.93) | 321 (87.47) | 94 (65.73) | <.001b |
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| Rescheduling/postponing appts | 44 (28.76) | 161 (43.90) | 115 (80.42) | <.001b |
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| Cancelling appts | 24 (15.69) | 77 (20.98) | 62 (43.36) | <.001b |
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| Restrictions on appts (eg, by patient age, medical comorbidity, recent travel) | 21 (13.73) | 55 (14.91) | 37 (25.87) | .006b |
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| Precautionary measures (eg, personal protective equipment, social distancing) | 14 (9.15) | 18 (4.88) | 5 (3.42) | .07b |
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| Other adjustment (eg, expanding therapeutic services, education/training-related restrictions) | 6 (3.92) | 17 (4.61) | 7 (4.79) | .91b |
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| N/Ac (no change in practice) | 2 (1.31) | 6 (1.63) | 3 (2.05) | .87b |
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| In-person | 22.09 (0.86) | 19.64 (0.56) | 9.89 (0.89) | <.001e,f |
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| Remote/tele–mental health | 1.25 (0.30) | 1.08 (0.18) | 0.46 (0.30) | .006e |
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| Total | 23.12 (0.90) | 20.61 (0.58) | 10.28 (0.93) | <.001e,f |
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| In-person | 17.96 (0.42) | 17.70 (0.27) | 16.73 (0.46) | .03f |
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| Remote/tele–mental health | 2.01 (0.34) | 1.53 (0.21) | 0.75 (0.34) | .03e |
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| Total | 19.97 (0.44) | 18.93 (0.28) | 17.34 (0.48) | <.001e,f |
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| In-person | 6.76 (0.72) | 4.69 (0.45) | 4.83 (0.77) | .04g |
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| Remote/tele–mental health | 14.71 (0.84) | 12.20 (0.52) | 3.45 (0.85) | <.001e,f,g |
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| Total | 18.66 (0.83) | 15.81 (0.53) | 12.07 (0.91) | <.001e,f,g |
| Percent of week working remotely, EMM (SE) | 80.17 (3.06) | 80.03 (1.89) | 70.84 (3.22) | .06 | |
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| Reported not implementing tele–mental health in Dec 2019, n (%) | 102 (82.26) | 231 (70.86) | 108 (89.26) | <.001b |
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| Reported not implementing tele–mental health in late Feb 2020, n (%) | 91 (73.98) | 214 (65.64) | 103 (88.03) | <.001b |
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| Reported not implementing tele–mental health currently, n (%) | 14 (9.66) | 42 (11.90) | 57 (42.54) | <.001b |
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| Easy access to ITh services, n (%) | 102 (66.67) | 253 (68.94) | 111 (77.62) | .08b |
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| Perceived adequacy of tele–mental health training, EMM (SE) | 3.35 (0.11) | 3.59 (0.07) | 3.48 (0.12) | .23 |
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| Difficulty with tele–mental health implementation, EMM (SE) | 2.99 (0.10) | 2.97 (0.07) | 3.26 (0.14) | .14 |
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| Likelihood of continuing to provide tele–mental health services, EMM (SE) | 3.69 (0.11) | 3.70 (0.07) | 3.43 (0.12) | .16 |
aappt: appointment.
bBased on Bonferroni adjustment for chi-square tests.
cN/A: not applicable.
dEMM: estimated marginal mean.
eSignificant difference between 2 and 3.
fSignificant difference between 1 and 3.
gSignificant difference between 1 and 2.
hIT: information technology.
Results of chi-squares for practice adjustments and analyses of covariance for patients seen and tele–mental health factors during COVID-19 by setting.
| Variables | (1) AMCa (n=172) | (2) CMHb (n=70) | (3) PPc (n=196) | (4) VAd (n=90) | ||
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| Tele–mental health/virtual apptse (vs in-person) | 152 (88.37) | 63 (90.00) | 169 (86.22) | 78 (86.67) | .83f |
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| Rescheduling/postponing appts | 112 (65.12) | 29 (41.43) | 76 (38.78) | 48 (53.33) | <.001f |
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| Cancelling appts | 61 (35.47) | 9 (12.86) | 44 (22.45) | 20 (22.22) | .001f |
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| Restrictions on appts (eg, by patient age, medical comorbidity, recent travel) | 35 (20.35) | 14 (20.00) | 25 (12.76) | 11 (12.22) | .13f |
|
| Precautionary measures (eg, personal protective equipment, social distancing) | 4 (2.33) | 4 (5.71) | 9 (4.59) | 3 (3.33) | .55f |
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| Other adjustment (eg, expanding therapeutic services, education/training-related restrictions) | 6 (3.49) | 1 (1.43) | 8 (4.08) | 6 (6.67) | .39f |
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| N/Ag (no change in practice) | 1 (0.58) | 1 (1.43) | 1 (0.51) | 1 (1.11) | .85f |
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| In-person | 15.52 (0.88) | 23.71 (1.36) | 17.33 (0.83) | 15.99 (1.21) | <.001i,j,k |
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| Remote/tele–mental health | 1.14 (0.37) | 2.06 (0.60) | 0.68 (0.34) | 1.69 (0.51) | .02 |
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| Total | 16.41 (0.98) | 25.35 (1.53) | 17.96 (0.93) | 17.47 (1.36) | <.001i,j,k |
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| In-person | 16.13 (0.38) | 16.71 (0.60) | 17.53 (0.36) | 16.70 (0.52) | .45 |
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| Remote/tele–mental health | 1.42 (0.29) | 1.86 (0.47) | 1.46 (0.27) | 1.60 (0.40) | .31 |
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| Total | 17.21 (0.42) | 19.00 (0.67) | 18.77 (0.40) | 17.86 (0.58) | .16 |
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| In-person | 4.09 (0.61) | 3.23 (0.99) | 4.92 (0.57) | 3.90 (0.85) | .77 |
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| Remote/tele–mental health | 8.31 (0.84) | 16.10 (1.36) | 13.25 (0.78) | 10.28 (1.16) | <.001i,l |
|
| Total | 13.03 (0.76) | 15.42 (1.20) | 17.79 (0.71) | 14.19 (1.05) | <.001i,l |
| Percent of week working remotely, EMM (SE) | 84.33 (2.56) | 75.07 (4.20) | 81.60 (2.41) | 82.05 (4.33) | .35 | |
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| Reported not implementing tele–mental health in Dec 2019, n (%) | 130 (87.84) | 42 (75.00) | 125 (70.22) | 51 (65.38) | <.001f |
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| Reported not implementing tele–mental health in late Feb 2020, n (%) | 123 (84.25) | 43 (72.88) | 115 (66.09) | 41 (53.95) | <.001f |
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| Reported not implementing tele–mental health currently, n (%) | 36 (21.95) | 7 (10.14) | 21 (10.94) | 10 (11.63) | .01f |
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| Easy access to ITm services, n (%) | 160 (93.02) | 52 (74.29) | 58 (29.59) | 73 (81.11) | <.001f |
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| Perceived adequacy of tele–mental health training, EMM (SE) | 3.59 (0.10) | 3.40 (0.16) | 3.70 (0.10) | 3.90 (0.13) | .11 |
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| Difficulty with tele–mental health implementation, EMM (SE) | 3.21 (0.10) | 3.26 (0.15) | 2.60 (0.09) | 3.25 (0.13) | <.001j,l,n |
|
| Likelihood of continuing to provide tele–mental health services, EMM (SE) | 3.55 (0.10) | 3.66 (0.16) | 3.56 (0.10) | 3.89 (0.14) | .33 |
aAMC: academic medical center.
bCMH: community mental health.
cPP: private practice.
dVA: Veterans Affairs.
eappt: appointment.
fBased on Bonferroni adjustment for chi-square tests.
gN/A: not applicable.
hEMM: estimated marginal mean.
iSignificant difference between 1 and 2.
jSignificant difference between 2 and 3.
kSignificant difference between 2 and 4.
lSignificant difference between 1 and 3.
mIT: information technology.
nSignificant difference between 3 and 4.