Palliative Care

Psychotherapy Telemental Health Center and Regional Pilot

A pilot program that delivers telemental health care for posttraumatic stress disorder provides best practices for facilities looking to expand in-home and remote care to veterans.

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Within VHA, telemental health (TMH) refers to behavioral health services that are provided remotely, using secure communication technologies, to veterans who are separated by distance from their mental health providers. 1 Telemental health sometimes involves video teleconferencing (VTC) technology, where a veteran (or group of veterans) in one location and a provider in a different location are able to communicate in real time through a computer monitor or television screen. 2 In the VHA, TMH visits are typically conducted from a central location (such as a medical center hospital) to a community-based outpatient clinic (CBOC), but pilot projects have also tested VTC in homes as well. 1,3,4

In addition to providing timely access to behavioral health services in rural or underserved locations, TMH eliminates travel that may be disruptive or costly and allows mental health providers to consult with or provide supervision to one another. Telemental health can be used to make diagnoses, manage care, perform checkups, and provide long-term, follow-up care. Other uses for TMH include clinical assessment, individual and group psychotherapy, psycho-educational interventions, cognitive testing, and general psychiatric care. 1,5,6 More recently, TMH has been used to provide evidence-based psychotherapies (EBPs) to individuals with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other mental health diagnoses. 6,7 Such care may be particularly advantageous for veterans with PTSD, because traveling can be a burden for them or a trigger for PTSD symptoms.

Although interactive video technology is becoming widely available, its use is limited in health care systems due to lack of knowledge, education, logistical guidance, and technical training. The authors have conducted EBPs using VTC across VISN 22 in both office-to-office and office-to-home modalities and are providing EBPs using VTC to CBOCs in other VISNs across the western U.S. This article addresses these issues, outlining the necessary steps required to establish a TMH clinic and to share the successes of the EBP TMH Center and Regional Pilot used at VISN 22.

Telemental Health

Telemental health is an effective alternative to in-person treatment and is well regarded by both mental health providers and veterans. Overall, mental health providers believe it can help reduce the stigma associated with traditional mental health care and ease transportation-related issues for veterans. Telemental health allows access to care for veterans living in rural or remote areas in addition to those who are incarcerated or are otherwise unable to attend visits at primary VA facilities. 2,8-10 In an assessment of TMH services in 40 CBOCs across VISN 16, most CBOC mental health providers found it to be an acceptable alternative to face-to-face care, recognize the value of TMH, and endorse a willingness to use and expand TMH programs within their clinics. 11

Veterans who participated in TMH via VTC have expressed satisfaction with the decreased travel time and expenses, fewer interactions with crowds, and fewer parking problems. 12 Several studies suggested that veterans preferred TMH to in-person contact due to more rapid access to care and specialists who would otherwise be unavailable at remote locations.5,10 Similarly, veterans who avoid in-person mental health care were more open to remote therapy for many of the reasons listed earlier. Studies suggest that veterans from both rural and urban locations are generally receptive to receiving mental health services via TMH. 5,10

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