Remote mental health clients prefer face-to-face consultations to telehealth during and after the COVID-19 pandemic

Author:

Amos Andrew James1ORCID,Middleton Jocelyn2,Gardiner Fergus W.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Director of Training, Psychiatry for North Queensland, Townsville, QLD

2. Manager, Mental Health and Wellbeing teams, Royal Flying Doctor Service, Cairns, QLD

3. Director, Public Health and Research, Royal Flying Doctor Service, Federation, Canberra, ACT

Abstract

Objective: To guide the efficient and effective provision of mental health services to clients in Central West and Far North Queensland, we surveyed preferences for face-to-face or in-person contact. Methods: A clinician-designed survey of contact preferences was offered to 248 clients of mental health services in Far North and Central West Queensland in mid-2020. With the onset of COVID-19, the survey was modified to measure the impact of the pandemic. Results: Just over half of the services’ clients participated in the survey (50.4%), of whom more were female (63.2%). Of the participants, 46.3% in Far North and 8.6% in Central West Queensland identified as Indigenous. Strong resistance to telehealth before the pandemic across groups (76%) was moderated during COVID-19 (42.4%), an effect that appeared likely to continue past the pandemic for Central West clients (34.5%). Far North clients indicated their telehealth reluctance would return after the pandemic (77.6%). Conclusions: Our results suggest that remote Australians strongly prefer in-person mental health care to telehealth. Although the COVID-19 pandemic increased acceptance of telehealth across regions while social distancing continued, there was evidence that Indigenous Australians were more likely to prefer in-person contact after the pandemic.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

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