Telehealth News

Study Targets Benefits of Asynchronous Telehealth for Mental Health Care

Researchers at UC Davis say an aysnchronous (store-and-forward) telehealth platform can be just as effective as an audio-visual platform in providing telemental health services.

Telemental health

Source: Getty Images

By Eric Wicklund

- New research out of the University of California Davis finds that telehealth treatments for people with non-urgent mental health needs can be delivered via an asynchronous (store-and-forward) platform just as well as through an audio-visual platform.

A study publishing online last month in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR) indicates patients using either asynchronous or synchronous telemedicine technology to meet with psychiatrists saw no significant difference in improvements – though both “had statistically and clinically significant improvements” in treatment outcomes over the five-year study.

The research is important at a time when the healthcare industry is striving to address barriers to access, including social determinants of health. Many see connected health as a vital platform to help people who can’t or won’t seek in-person treatment, but many – particularly those in rural and underserved communities – lack the resources to connect with a care provider.

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