UAlbany Team Suggests Ways to Address Pandemic Telemental Health Disparities

A woman wearing an orange shirt looks at her cell phone in her kitchen.

ALBANY, N.Y. (November 8, 2021) – There is an absence of research to guide telemental healthcare for pandemic relief along with an inadequate ability for the system to address telemental health disparities, a UAlbany team recently explained in the International Journal for Quality in Health Care.

Department of Health Policy, Management, and Behavior professors Feng (Johnson) Qian and Julia Hastings, along with Rukhsana Ahmed from UAlbany’s Department of Communication, examined telemental health services in the U.S. in relation to the pandemic. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), communities have faced increased mental health challenges directly and indirectly from Covid-19. Strategies used to mitigate the spread of disease, such as social distancing, have led to an explosion in the use of telemental health services. However, the UAlbany authors explain that not everyone has equal access or usage, and this may compound existing health disparities.

“Required technologies, language and communication, cultural competence, and digital literacy all serve as barriers, particularly for underserved communities, racial minority groups, and older adults,” Qian explains. “As a part of pandemic response, we must consider how to address these access problems along with how to strengthen our delivery to provide culturally and linguistically appropriate treatment.”

Qian notes that for Asian Americans, mental health services have largely failed to reach them, and they are less likely to seek out services due to stigma and shame about reaching out for help that other groups may not feel. In addition, Asian Americans have faced a dramatic increase in racism, harassment, and attack since the start of the pandemic, which may take a severe mental toll.

The team recommends that actions are simultaneously taken at the national, state, community, and patient levels. Based on their expertise, some suggestions include:

  • Reimbursement policies that encourage underserved and ethnic minorities to seek out telemental health treatment
  • Linguistically adapted telemental health services to increase uptake and success of services
  • Full integration of telemental health services from providers to help reduce inequities

“If we want to mitigate the telemental health divide, the time to act is now,” says Qian. “Addressing telemental health disparities is a complex issue, but with a multi-pronged approach that mobilizes resources at various levels, we can establish an effective and sustainable telemental health system.”

The full piece can be viewed in the International Journal for Quality in Health Care.