Review of key telepsychiatry outcomes
University of Colorado Denver · Creative Research Enterprises (United States)
Abstract
To conduct a review of the telepsychiatry literature.
We conducted a systematic search of the literature on telepsychiatry using the search terms, "telepsychiatry", "telemental health", "telecare", "telemedicine", "e-health", and "videoconferencing". To meet criteria for inclusion, studies had to: (1) be published in a peer-reviewed journal after the year 2000; (2) be written in English; (3) use videoconferencing technology for the provision of mental health assessment or treatment services; and (4) use an adequately-powered randomized controlled trial design in the case of treatment outcome studies. Out of 1976 studies identified by searches in PubMed (Medline database), Ovid medline, PsychInfo, Embase, and EBSCO PSYCH, 452 met inclusion criteria. Studies that met all inclusion criteria were organized into one of six categories: (1) satisfaction; (2) reliability; (3) treatment outcomes; (4) implementation outcomes; (5) cost effectiveness; and (6) and legal issues. All disagreements were resolved by reassessing study characteristics and discussion.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 22.82
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 128
Authors
5- SHSamuel HubleyCorresponding
University of Colorado Denver, Creative Research Enterprises (United States)
- SBSarah B Lynch
University of Colorado Denver, Creative Research Enterprises (United States)
- CDChristopher D. Schneck
Creative Research Enterprises (United States), University of Colorado Denver
- MRMarshall R. Thomas
Creative Research Enterprises (United States), University of Colorado Denver
- JHJay H. Shore
University of Colorado Denver, Creative Research Enterprises (United States)
Topics & keywords
- Telepsychiatry
- Telemedicine
- MEDLINE
- Medicine
- Mental health
- Videoconferencing
- Inclusion (mineral)
- Patient satisfaction