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Poster 90

Digital Health Technologies in Mental Health Care: Changing Perspectives of Health Care Professionals from 2019 to 2021

Fatima Sadat , Fatima Sadat

Psych Congress 2022
Abstract: Background Demand for digital mental health tools has risen since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic1; however, their evolving use in mental health care is not well understood. We surveyed mental health care professionals (HCPs) before and after the onset of the pandemic and assessed how use of and attitudes about digital technology changed. Methods We distributed a digital health survey to HCPs in the United States in June of 2019 (N = 141) and in 2021 after the pandemic began (N = 151). Both surveys recorded the respondents’ perceived barriers to integrating new digital health technologies and the tools they currently used in their practice. Results HCP use of telemedicine increased from 47% of respondents in 2019 to 81% in 2021, as did the use of mHealth sensors (2% vs 10%). Patient comfort with technology remained one of the biggest barriers to implementing new digital tools (40% vs 43%), while difficulty integrating digital tools into clinical practice became less common (40% vs 32%). Data management (19% vs 10%) and patient acceptability (19% vs 13%) were cited less often as barriers in 2021. Respondents’ thoughts on what can be most improved by digital technology shifted substantially, with increased access to care rising from 27% of responses in 2019 to 46% in 2021. Conclusions The pandemic has changed how HCPs perceive digital health technologies and how they implement these tools in clinical practice. A growing number of HCPs believe increased access to care is the outcome that technology can most improve.Short Description: We surveyed mental health care professionals (HCPs) in 2019 before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and in 2021 after its onset. We assessed how use of and attitudes about digital technology have changed, and found that HCPs used telemedicine and mHealth sensors more after the pandemic began. In 2021, compared with 2019, more respondents perceived the greatest benefit of digital technologies in mental health care was increased access to treatment.Name of Sponsoring Organization(s): This research was funded by Otsuka Pharmaceutical Development & Commercialization, Inc., Princeton, NJ, USA.

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