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Mental health professionals and telehealth in a rural setting: a cross sectional survey

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Version 2 2024-03-13, 09:52
Version 1 2023-12-20, 12:14
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-13, 09:52 authored by David NelsonDavid Nelson, Maxime InghelsMaxime Inghels, Amanda Kenny, Steve Skinner, Tracy McCranor, Stephen Wyatt, Jaspreet Phull, Agnes Nanyonjo, Ojali Yusuff, Mark GussyMark Gussy

BackgroundTelehealth usage has been promoted in all settings but has been identified as a panacea to issues of access and equity in the rural context. However, uptake and widespread integration of telehealth across all parts of the health system has been slow, with a myriad of barriers documented, including in rural settings. The crisis of the COVID-19 pandemic, saw barriers rapidly overturned with the unprecedented and exponential rise in telehealth usage. The uniqueness of the crisis forced telehealth adoption, but as the urgency stabilises, pandemic learnings must be captured, utilised, and built upon in a post-pandemic world. The aim of this study was to document staff experiences and perceptions of delivering rural psychological therapies via telehealth during the pandemic and to capture learnings for future rural telehealth delivery.MethodsAn online cross-sectional survey that explored mental health professional’s experiences, use, and perceptions of telehealth before and after pandemic-enforced changes to service delivery.ResultsSixty-two respondents completed the questionnaire (response rate 68%). Both the delivery of telehealth via telephone and online video conferencing significantly increased during the pandemic (66% vs 98%, p?

History

School affiliated with

  • University of Lincoln (Historic Research Outputs)

Publication Title

BMC Health Services Research

Volume

23

Publisher

BMC

eISSN

1472-6963

Date Submitted

2023-03-09

Date Accepted

2023-01-18

Date of First Publication

2023-02-27

Date of Final Publication

2023-02-27

Date Document First Uploaded

2023-02-28

ePrints ID

53551