Telemental Health Research Highlights Telehealth Policy Barriers
Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, telehealth research frequently focused on its use to access mental and behavioral health services, since the services were the most commonly considered as appropriate to receive virtually rather than in-person. As attention to and demand for telemental health access increased during the pandemic, additional studies have been released showing both trends and areas for future research as well as creating new policy. For instance, determining how many mental health clinicians have shifted their practices post-pandemic to primarily virtual, and how that trend interplays with federal and state policies requiring in-person visits. Additionally, with a shortage of mental health providers in many areas of the country, telehealth is a key tool to increase access to needed health care providers. However, a variety of other policy issues such as lack of payer reimbursement and digital equity continue to be challenges and limit telehealth’s ability to fully address access.