Conference Coverage

Some telepsychiatry ‘here to stay’ post COVID


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM CP/AACP 2020 PSYCHIATRY UPDATE

Selecting patients for telepsychiatry

Not all patients will make the transition to telepsychiatry. “You can’t do telepsychiatry with everyone. It is a risk, so pick and choose,” Dr. Gupta said.

Dr. Henry A. Nasrallah

Dr. Henry A. Nasrallah

“Safety is a big consideration for conducting a telepsychiatry visit, especially when other health care providers are present. For example, when performing telehealth visits in a clinic, nursing home, or correctional facility, “I feel a lot more comfortable if there’s another health care clinician there,” Dr. Gupta said.

Clinicians may want to avoid a telepsychiatry visit for a patient in their own home for reasons of safety, reliability, and privacy. A longitudinal history with collateral information from friends or relatives can be helpful, but some subtle signs and body language may get missed over video, compared with an in-person visit. “Telepsychiatry can be a barrier at times. If there is substance abuse, we may not smell alcohol. Sometimes you may not see if the patient is using substances. You have to really reconsider if [there] is violence and self-injurious behavior,” he said.

Discussing the pros and cons of telepsychiatry is important to obtaining patient consent. While consent requirements have relaxed under the COVID-19 pandemic, consent should ideally be obtained in writing, but can also be obtained verbally during a crisis. A plan should be developed for what will happen in the case of technology failure. “The patient should also know you’re maintaining privacy, you’re maintaining confidentiality, but there is a risk of hacking,” Dr. Gupta said. “Those things can happen, [and] there are no guarantees.”

If a patient is uncomfortable after beginning telepsychiatry, moving to in-person visits is also an option. “Many times, I do that if I’m not getting a good handle on things,” Dr. Gupta said. Situations where patients insist on in-patient visits over telepsychiatry are rare in his experience, Dr. Gupta noted, and are usually the result of the patient being unfamiliar with the technology. In cases where a patient cannot be talked through a technology barrier, visits can be done in the clinic while taking proper precautions.

“If it is a first-time visit, then I do it in the clinic,” Dr. Gupta said. “They come in, they have a face mask, and we use our group therapy room. The patients sit in a social-distanced fashion. But then, you document why you did this in-person visit like that.”

Documentation during COVID-19 also includes identifying the patient at the first visit, the nature of the visit (teleconference or other), parties present, referencing the pandemic, writing the location of the patient and the clinician, noting the patient’s satisfaction, evaluating the patient’s mental status, and recording what technology was used and any technical issues that were encountered.

Some populations of patients are better suited to telepsychiatry than others. It is more convenient for chronically psychiatrically ill patients in group homes and their staff to communicate through telepsychiatry, Dr. Gupta said. Consultation liaison in hospitals and emergency departments through telepsychiatry can limit the spread of infection, while increased access and convenience occurs as telepsychiatry is implemented in correctional facilities and nursing homes.

“What we are doing now, some of it is here to stay,” Dr. Gupta said.

In situations where a patient needs to switch providers, clinicians should continue to follow that patient until his first patient visit with that new provider. It is also important to set boundaries and apply some level of formality to the telepsychiatry visit, which means seeing the patient in a secure location where he can speak freely and privately.

“The best practices are [to] maintain faith [and] fidelity of the psychiatric assessment,” Dr. Gupta said. “Keep the trust and do your best to maintain patient privacy, because the privacy is not the same as it may be in a face-to-face session when you use televideo.”

Global Academy and this news organization are owned by the same parent company.

Dr. Gupta reported no relevant financial disclosures. Dr. Nasrallah disclosed serving as a consultant for and on the speakers bureaus of several pharmaceutical companies, including Alkermes, Janssen, and Lundbeck. He also disclosed serving on the speakers bureau of Otsuka.

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