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Environmental Factors for Sustained Telehealth Use in Mental Health Services: A Mixed Methods Analysis.
Werkmeister, Benjamin; Haase, Anne M; Fleming, Theresa; Officer, Tara N.
Affiliation
  • Werkmeister B; School of Health Te Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand.
  • Haase AM; Department of Psychological Medicine Te Whatu Ora-Health New Zealand, Wellington, New Zealand.
  • Fleming T; Department of Psychological Medicine University of Otago-Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand.
  • Officer TN; School of Health Te Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand.
Int J Telemed Appl ; 2024: 8835933, 2024.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39314675
ABSTRACT

Background:

The mental health service delivery gap remains high globally. Appropriate telehealth use may increase capacity through flexible remote care provision. Despite the historical lack of telehealth integration into publicly funded mental health services, during COVID-19 lockdowns, services rapidly switched to telephone and audiovisual care provision. In Aotearoa New Zealand (NZ), this was abandoned when no longer required by COVID-19 restrictions. This study explores environmental factors associated with telehealth implementation and ongoing use or discontinuation across a multiregional outpatient mental health service. This work contributes to understanding system-level factors influencing telehealth use and thus informs policy and practice in postpandemic environments.

Methods:

This mixed methods study applied an interpretive description methodology. Semistructured interviews with 33 mental health clinicians were thematically analysed. Qualitative findings were reframed and evaluated using time series analyses of population-level quantitative data (prior to and throughout the pandemic). Findings were synthesised with qualitative themes to develop an understanding of environmental factors contributing to telehealth use.

Results:

Findings highlighted an increase in clients assessed by mental health services and declining clinician numbers, contributing to pressure placed on clinicians. There was a lack of culture supporting telehealth, including limited awareness, leadership, and champions to facilitate implementation. Some teams provided services suited to telehealth; other subspeciality teams had limited applications for telehealth. There was a general lack of policy and guidelines to support telehealth use and limited technical support for clinicians unfamiliar with audiovisual software.

Conclusion:

Disorganised telehealth adoption in the study regions provides insight into wider environmental drivers affecting telehealth uptake. For telehealth to become a workable service delivery mode following COVID-19, stewardship and culture shifts are required, including policy development, technical support, and resources to support clinical teams. Telehealth may address growing service demand by improving interfaces with primary care and providing timely access to specialist input.
Key words

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: Int J Telemed Appl / International journal of telemedicine an applications Year: 2024 Document type: Article Affiliation country: New Zealand Country of publication: Egypt

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: Int J Telemed Appl / International journal of telemedicine an applications Year: 2024 Document type: Article Affiliation country: New Zealand Country of publication: Egypt