Giving Compass' Take:
- A new RAND Corporation study found that telehealth's behavioral and mental health services have increased during the pandemic.
- How can donors help make mental health services more accessible as the effects of the pandemic continue?
- Learn about the mental health costs of the pandemic.
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Use of telehealth jumped sharply during the first months of the coronavirus pandemic shutdown, with the approach being used more often for behavioral health services than for medical care, according to a new RAND Corporation study.
Between mid-March and early May 2020, telehealth was used by more than 40% of patients with a chronic physical health condition and by more than 50% of those with a behavioral health condition, according to findings published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine.
Overall, almost half of the people who were undergoing treatment when the pandemic shutdown began reported using some form of telemedicine.
Researchers found that the use of telehealth for behavioral health conditions was lower among women and among people over the age of 60. Use of telehealth also was lower among non-Hispanic whites relative to non-Hispanic Blacks, and was lower among those with less than a high school education relative to those with a college degree.
Read the full article about telehealth services by Shira H. Fischer at RAND Corporation.