Telehealth News

mHealth Counseling Can Help Veterans Cope With Stress While at Work

Tufts researchers have found that a program offering mHealth counseling for depression can help veterans returning to the workforce deal with on-the-job stress and improve their productivity and coping skills.

Source: ThinkStock

By Eric Wicklund

- An mHealth program offering counseling to veterans in the workforce can help reduce symptoms of depression while improving workplace productivity, according to researchers at Boston’s Tufts Medical Center.

In a study recently published in JAMA Network Open, the US Veterans Health Administration’s Be Well at Work (BWAW) program, included in an integrated care program, helped working veterans by giving them access to phone-based counseling on coping skills.

“Facilitating reentry and reintegration into civilian life are high-priority goals within the Department of Veterans Affairs, and many employers want to hire veterans and be assured that they will function effectively in the workplace,” the study, led by Debra Lerner, MSc, PhD, of the Tufts University School of Medicine and Tufts Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, concluded. “Depression and difficulty functioning in occupational roles and settings pose significant barriers to achieving success. Building telephonic work-focused care into (integrated care) offers a holistic, accessible, and economical solution. As the VHA invests in telemedicine to address access barriers, BWAW’s telephone-based counseling provides a further opportunity to make higher-quality care more accessible to veterans.”

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