| Literature DB >> 33501373 |
Kali Orchard1, Cesar Cruz2, Erica Z Shoemaker3, Donald M Hilty4.
Abstract
Telepsychiatry's effectiveness is well established, and interest in it is growing, despite few residency/fellowship core curricula and rotations. A link to a cross-sectional survey was sent via national organization listservs for psychiatry residents, fellows, faculty, and program directors to complete. The survey queried demographics, clinical experience, and views/concerns about telepsychiatry. Descriptive statistics and other analyses compared groups to assess the impact of amount clinical experience and psychiatric specialty (general vs. child and adolescent psychiatry), on interest, and views/concerns about the practice of telepsychiatry. All respondents (N = 270; child psychiatry N = 89) have limited clinical experience with telepsychiatry (46% overall; 49% of non-child had none versus 40% child). Trainees (N = 123; child N = 43) expressed less interest than others. All respondents expressed worry about ability to do a physical exam, connectivity, medico-legal issues, and fit for diverse populations. Child respondents expressed less concern than others, but they reported more worry about loss of nonverbal cues. Clinical experience with telepsychiatry in the range of 6-20 h appears to build interest and allay concerns, though 1-5 h also may have a positive impact. More research is needed to assess clinical experience, interest, and concerns for adult and child psychiatry trainees and clinicians. Replicable, curricular interventions appear to be indicated.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescent; Child; Concerns; Education; Fellows; Graduate; Health; Medical; Mental; Perceptions; Psychiatry; Residents; Survey; Telebehavioral; Telehealth; Telepsychiatry; Views
Year: 2021 PMID: 33501373 PMCID: PMC7820828 DOI: 10.1007/s41347-020-00187-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Technol Behav Sci ISSN: 2366-5963
Top 10 concerns about telepsychiatry: a comparison of all respondents, residents/fellows, and program directors/faculty
| # | Item/Concern | All | R/F | PD/Fac |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | One cannot perform a physical exam | 54.47% | 63.64%* | 47.06% |
| 2 | Poor internet connection is a roadblock to implementing TP | 51.63% | 54.55% | 49.26% |
| 3 | Liability risks involved with TP are unknown | 46.75% | 50.91% | 43.38% |
| 4 | Certain cultures will be less accepting | 39.62% | 46.36%* | 33.09% |
| 5 | Non-verbal cues will be missed | 35.77% | 44.55%* | 28.68% |
| 6 | Privacy is an issue | 32.52% | 35.25% | 30.15% |
| 7 | TP is not as effective as to in-person psychiatry | 32.11% | 37.27% | 27.94% |
| 8 | One cannot manage emergencies related to safety with TP | 29.67% | 49.09%* | 22.06% |
| 9 | Residency is insufficient for one to become competent in TP | 29.67% | 40.91%* | 20.59% |
| 10 | Paranoid patients do not like TP | 26.42% | 42.67%* | 13.24% |
Fac faculty, F fellow, PD program director, R resident, TP telepsychiatry
*Significant with p < 0.05 in comparing Rs/Fs versus PDs/Fac
Fig. 2A comparison of adult program director/faculty and resident/fellow vs. child program director/faculty and resident/fellow psychiatrist interest in telepsychiatry based on none, 1 – 5 h and 6 – 20+ h of clinical experience
Fig. 1A comparison of clinical experience in telepsychiatry for all psychiatrists (N = 270), adult (N = 181), and child (N = 81) psychiatrists (In %)
A comparison of child and non-child psychiatrist’ top 10 concerns about telepsychiatry
| Item/Concern | Child | Non-child |
|---|---|---|
| One cannot perform a physical exam with TP | 43.21% | 60.00%* |
| Nonverbal cues are missed with TP | 42.98% | 32.73%* |
| Poor internet connection is a roadblock to TP | 40.74% | 56.97%* |
| The liability risks involved in TP are unknown | 39.51% | 50.30%* |
| Certain cultures will be less accepting of TP | 38.27% | 39.39% |
| One cannot manage emergencies related to safety with TP | 30.88% | 29.09% |
| TP is not as effective as face-to-face psychiatry | 28.40% | 33.94% |
| Clinicians find TP to be too impersonal | 28.40% | 24.24% |
| Residency training is insufficient for one to become competent with TP | 27.16% | 30.91% |
| Disruptive behavior cannot be managed with TP | 25.93% | 26.67% |
TP telepsychiatry
*Significant with p < 0.05 in comparing child to non-child respondents
A comparison of concerns about telepsychiatry between child psychiatrists with no experience versus compared with those with multiple encounters
| Item/Concern | No experience | Multiple encounters |
|---|---|---|
| The liability risks involved in TP are unknown | 60.00% | 18.18%* |
| Residency training is insufficient for one to become competent with TP | 45.71% | 4.54%* |
| Nonverbal cues are missed with TP | 42.86% | 40.91% |
| One cannot perform a physical exam with TP | 42.86% | 40.91% |
| One cannot manage emergencies related to safety with TP | 40.00% | 18.18%* |
| TP is not as effective as face-to-face psychiatry | 40.00% | 13.64%* |
| Poor internet connection is a roadblock to TP | 40.00% | 45.45% |
| Clinicians find TP to be too impersonal | 40.00% | 13.64% |
| Certain cultures will be less accepting of TP | 40.00% | 31.82% |
| Paranoid patients do not like TP | 37.14% | 18.18%* |
TP telepsychiatry1Overall child psychiatry N = 89; this is a comparison of two subgroups only
*Significant with p < 0.05 in comparing no with significant experience (i.e., multiple encounters)