Doupnik Stephanie K, Bowden Cadence F, Worsley Diana, Keating Cameron, Foster Ashley A, Quarshie William, Min Jungwon, Schulz Paul, Tani Ilmul Jahan, Meisel Zachary, Marcus Steven C
Department of Pediatrics, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
Department of Health Policy, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, USA.
Acad Emerg Med. 2025 Sep;32(9):956-965. doi: 10.1111/acem.70055. Epub 2025 May 7.
Mental health concerns are the reason for 7% of U.S. emergency department (ED) visits, and telehealth is increasingly used to provide emergency mental health care. Rural, critical-access hospitals have limited access to in-person mental health care. We sought to describe telemental health care programs in U.S. EDs and test whether access to telemental health care affects use of suicide prevention practices.
We conducted a cross-sectional survey of telemental health care and suicide prevention practices at a nationally representative sample of all U.S. EDs associated with acute care general medical hospitals. We used proportionate allocation and nonresponse weighting to generate national estimates. We used weighted adjusted logistic regression models to measure associations between an ED's access to telemental health care and use of six recommended suicide-prevention practices.
A total of 606 of 977 eligible EDs completed the survey (62% response rate), weighted to represent 4321 EDs nationally. Telemental health care was used in 68% of EDs, and rural, smaller-volume, and critical-access EDs were more likely to use telemental health care. Critical-access hospitals were more likely to use telemental health care 24/7 and less likely to have access to a telehealth psychiatrist or electronic health record (EHR)-based information sharing. With structural differences being adjusted for, EDs with telemental health care were more likely to assess patients' suicidal intent or plans (adjusted risk ratio [ARR] 1.07, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.10-1.14) and access to lethal means (ARR 1.13, 95% CI 1.01-1.26). Critical-access EDs with telemental health care were also more likely to provide lethal means safety counseling (ARR 2.11, 95% CI 1.14-3.89).
Telemental health care is widely used across all types of EDs, and EDs with telemental health care are more likely to use suicide prevention practices. Critical-access hospitals rely on telemental health care to a great extent and need better access to telehealth psychiatry and EHR information sharing.
心理健康问题是美国7%急诊就诊的原因,远程医疗越来越多地用于提供紧急心理健康护理。农村的急救医院获得面对面心理健康护理的机会有限。我们试图描述美国急诊部门的远程心理健康护理项目,并测试获得远程心理健康护理是否会影响自杀预防措施的使用。
我们对与急性护理综合医院相关的所有美国急诊部门的全国代表性样本进行了远程心理健康护理和自杀预防措施的横断面调查。我们使用按比例分配和无应答加权来生成全国估计数。我们使用加权调整逻辑回归模型来衡量急诊部门获得远程心理健康护理与使用六种推荐的自杀预防措施之间的关联。
977家符合条件的急诊部门中共有606家完成了调查(回复率62%),加权后代表全国4321家急诊部门。68%的急诊部门使用了远程心理健康护理,农村、就诊量较小的急诊部门和急救医院更有可能使用远程心理健康护理。急救医院更有可能全天候使用远程心理健康护理,而获得远程医疗精神科医生或基于电子健康记录(EHR)的信息共享的可能性较小。在调整了结构差异后,拥有远程心理健康护理的急诊部门更有可能评估患者的自杀意图或计划(调整风险比[ARR]1.07,95%置信区间[CI]1.10 - 1.14)以及获取致命手段(ARR 1.13,95%CI 1.01 - 1.26)。拥有远程心理健康护理的急救医院也更有可能提供致命手段安全咨询(ARR 2.11,95%CI 1.14 - 3.89)。
远程心理健康护理在各类急诊部门广泛使用,拥有远程心理健康护理的急诊部门更有可能使用自杀预防措施。急救医院在很大程度上依赖远程心理健康护理,并且需要更好地获得远程医疗精神科服务和EHR信息共享。