| Literature DB >> 34101075 |
Hua Li1, Alana Glecia2, Arlene Kent-Wilkinson3, Donald Leidl3, Manal Kleib4, Tracie Risling3.
Abstract
Due to COVID-19, face-to-face mental health service delivery has been interrupted by social distancing and stay-at-home orders. To abridge physical distance between patients and healthcare providers, while limiting exposure to COVID-19, telepsychiatry has been widely adopted to provide services to patients with pre-existing mental health disorders. Though telepsychiatry has become more mainstream in delivering mental health services during COVID-19, evaluation studies of the rapid conversion of care delivery from face-to-face to telepsychiatry have been limited. The aim of this study was to review the literature on the transition of mental health service delivery to telepsychiatry during COVID-19. The findings of the current review showed that a majority of patients and healthcare providers were satisfied with telepsychiatry services, and suggest that telepsychiatry is feasible and appropriate for supporting patients and healthcare providers during COVID-19.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Healthcare providers; Mental health service delivery; Patients; Telepsychiatry
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34101075 PMCID: PMC8185490 DOI: 10.1007/s11126-021-09926-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychiatr Q ISSN: 0033-2720
Fig. 1Study selection flow diagram
Summary of selected studies
| Author (year), country | Study Design | Study Aim | Sample |
|---|---|---|---|
| Haxhihamza et al. (2020), Spain | Cross-sectional | Assess patient satisfaction with the shift to telemedicine in the wake of COVID-19 | 28 outpatients |
| Heyman-Kantor et al. (2020), U.S | Case study | Understand the experiences of patients regarding the rapid transition to teletherapy | 2 Patients of a large urban academic tertiary care hospital |
| Mishkind et al. (2020), U.S | Case report | Examine how two outpatient clinics implemented rapid transformation to fully virtualized services during COVID-19 pandemic | • Analyzed patient clinic appointments • Pre-Covid-19, 963 patient appointments • Virtualization, 499 patient appointments • Post-Covid-19, 1,168 patient appointments |
| Miu et al. (2020), U.S | Cross-sectional | • Examine whether there were group differences between patients with SMI and non-SMI in teletherapy conversion, and in new patients starting therapy via telehealth between SMI and non-SMI | 1444 patients: 219 (15.2%) patients with SMI; 1225 (84.3%) patients without SMI |
| Peralta et al. (2020), Dominican Republic | Case report | Determine if teleconsultation for patients with mental health issues was effective during the COVID-19 pandemic and describe the characteristics of the service users | • 598 psychologists • 70 psychiatrists |
| Pierce et al. (2020), U.S | Cross-sectional | Investigate psychologists’ telepsychology use before, during, and post COVID-19, and their relation to demographic, training, policy, and clinical practice variables | 2,619 psychologists |
| Severe et al. (2020), U.S | Mixed- method | Examine possible factors that may influence patients’ initial decision on using telepsychiatry during Covid-19 | • 212 patients • 32 patient proxies or parents |
| Uscher-Pines et al. (2020), U.S | Qualitative | Examine the experiences of psychiatrists offering telemedicine in pandemic hotspots | 20 outpatient psychiatrists with little to no telemedicine experience prior to COVID-19 |