Health-care–Related Practices in Virtual Behavioral Health Treatment for Major Depression Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic

Author:

Weinfield Nancy S.1,Tavel Heather M.2,Goodrich Glenn2,McCracken Courtney E.3,Basra Sundeep1,Gander Jennifer C.3,Davis Teaniese L.3,Ritzwoller Debra P.2,Roblin Douglas W.1

Affiliation:

1. Kaiser Permanente Mid-Atlantic Permanente Research Institute, Rockville, MD

2. Institute for Health Research, Kaiser Permanente Colorado, Aurora, CO

3. Center for Research and Evaluation, Kaiser Permanente Georgia, Atlanta, GA

Abstract

Background: The abrupt shift to virtual care at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic had the potential to disrupt care practices in virtual behavioral health encounters. We examined changes over time in virtual behavioral health-care-related practices for patient encounters with diagnoses of major depression. Methods: This retrospective cohort study utilized electronic health record data from 3 integrated health care systems. Inverse probability of treatment weighting was used to adjust for covariates across 3 time periods, prepandemic (January 2019–March 2020), peak-pandemic shift to virtual care (April 2020–June 2020), and recovery of health care operations (July 2020–June 2021). First virtual follow-up behavioral health department encounters after an incident diagnostic encounter were examined for differences across the time periods in rates of antidepressant medication orders and fulfillments, and completion of patient-reported symptoms screeners in service of measurement-based care. Results: Antidepressant medication orders declined modestly but significantly in 2 of the 3 systems during the peak-pandemic period but rebounded during the recovery period. There were no significant changes in patient fulfillment of ordered antidepressant medications. Completion of symptom screeners increased significantly in all 3 systems during the peak-pandemic period and continued to increase significantly in the subsequent period. Conclusions: A rapid shift to virtual behavioral health care was possible without compromising health-care-related practices. The transition and subsequent adjustment period have instead been marked by improved adherence to measurement-based care practices in virtual visits, signaling a potential new capacity for virtual health care delivery.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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