The New York Times (8/25, Barry) reported, “Use of mental healthcare increased substantially during the coronavirus pandemic, as teletherapy lowered barriers to regular visits, according to a large study of insurance claims published” online Aug. 25 in a research letter in JAMA Health Forum. The study revealed that “from March 2020 to August 2022, mental health visits increased by 39 percent, and spending increased by 54 percent.” Additionally, the “examination of 1,554,895 claims for clinician visits…identified a tenfold increase in the use of telehealth.” This “rise in use of mental health services reflects both receding stigma and a lowering of practical barriers to mental health visits, said” Robert L. Trestman, PhD, MD, “chairman of the American Psychiatric Association’s council on healthcare systems and financing.”
Psychiatric News (8/25) quoted the study’s authors, who concluded, “These findings suggest that telehealth utilization for mental health services remains persistent and elevated.” But, should “this increased utilization” affect “spending, insurers may begin rejecting the new status quo,” a concern that “is particularly relevant when considered against the backdrop of telehealth policies that expired alongside the national [public health emergency] declaration.”
HCPlive (8/25, Kunzmann) also covered the study.
Related Links:
— “Mental Health Spending Surged During the Pandemic,”Ellen Barry, The New York Times , August 26, 2023