McLean Hospital, Belmont, Massachusetts, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Telemed J E Health. 2021 Dec;27(12):1399-1408. doi: 10.1089/tmj.2020.0481. Epub 2021 Feb 18.
Little is known about specialty mental health and/or substance use disorder (MH/SUD) clinicians' experiences transitioning from in-person to telehealth care, to treat a diagnostically diverse population during the COVID-19 pandemic. Survey of outpatient MH/SUD clinicians (psychiatrists, nurse practitioners, psychologists, and licensed clinical social workers; N = 107) at a psychiatric hospital. Clinician satisfaction and experiences using telehealth across a variety of services (individual, group or family therapy, initial assessments, evaluation and management, and neuropsychological assessment) were assessed using a mixed-methods approach. Across services, a majority agreed/strongly agreed that telehealth provided an opportunity to build rapport with patients (67-88%) and they could treat their patients' needs well (71-88%). The interest in continuing to use telehealth when in-person visits resume varied by type of service provided (50-71%). Group therapy and initial assessment were lowest (50% and 51%, respectively). Clinicians noted telehealth improved access to care for patients with logistical barriers, competing demands, mobility difficulties, and medical concerns; but was more challenging to care for patients with certain psychiatric characteristics (e.g., psychosis, paranoia, catatonia, high distractibility, and avoidance), high symptom severity, or who needed to improve social skills. Telehealth influenced the therapeutic process (e.g., observations of family dynamic, increased patient/clinician therapeutic alliance). MH/SUD clinicians who quickly transitioned to telehealth care during the pandemic were largely satisfied with telehealth, but also identified challenges related to specific patient characteristics, or types of MH/SUD services. These observations warrant additional study to better delineate the role for an expanded use of telehealth postpandemic.
关于精神健康和/或物质使用障碍(MH/SUD)专科临床医生在 COVID-19 大流行期间从面对面医疗转为远程医疗以治疗诊断多样化人群的经验,目前知之甚少。对一家精神病院的门诊 MH/SUD 临床医生(精神科医生、护士从业者、心理学家和持照临床社会工作者;N=107)进行了调查。使用混合方法评估了临床医生在各种服务(个体、团体或家庭治疗、初始评估、评估和管理以及神经心理评估)中使用远程医疗的满意度和经验。在各种服务中,大多数人同意/强烈同意远程医疗为与患者建立融洽关系提供了机会(67-88%),并且他们可以很好地满足患者的需求(71-88%)。当恢复面对面就诊时,继续使用远程医疗的兴趣因提供的服务类型而异(50-71%)。团体治疗和初始评估最低(分别为 50%和 51%)。临床医生指出,远程医疗改善了对有后勤障碍、竞争需求、行动困难和医疗问题的患者的护理机会;但对于某些具有特定精神特征(例如,精神病、偏执狂、紧张症、注意力高度分散和回避)、症状严重程度较高或需要提高社交技能的患者的护理更具挑战性。远程医疗影响了治疗过程(例如,观察家庭动态、增加患者/临床医生的治疗联盟)。在大流行期间迅速转向远程医疗的 MH/SUD 临床医生对远程医疗基本满意,但也确定了与特定患者特征或 MH/SUD 服务类型相关的挑战。这些观察结果需要进一步研究,以更好地阐明远程医疗在大流行后扩大使用的作用。