Years of data have demonstrated the benefits of telemedicine. It reduces costs, improves access to services, and eliminates the lost productivity that results from traveling to and from health care appointments. The data has swayed corporations, insurance companies, and even government agencies to contract with telemedicine services. Recently, thanks to insight on the part of government health payers and insurance companies, it has become possible for telemedicine companies to offer mental health services, making it easier than ever for patients to access the expertise they need.
Untapped
Mental Health Service Potential
On average, 44 million people in the
United States require health care services at any given point in time.
Unfortunately, National Alliance on Mental Illness statistics indicate that
only 40% of adults and 50% of children with mental health needs receive the
services that they require. This is a major problem because untreated mental
health issues, which range from anxiety and substance abuse to major depression
and suicide, can have far-reaching consequences for individuals, families, and
society as a whole. Failing to address mental health needs can increase
drop-out rates, escalate the risk of other chronic medical conditions, affect
crime rates, and more.
Under the leadership of telemedicine firms like TelaCare, MDLIVE, Teladoc
and American Well, telemedicine services have begun to offer
psychiatrists, psychologists, and a range of other mental health therapists.
Patients can access these providers quickly and easily, for treatment and
guidance on a range of health issues such as addiction, obsessive-compulsive
disorder, anxiety, and more. All it takes is an internet connection or phone
line.
These several telemedicine companies have answered the call to provide mental
health services to populations in need. One-quarter of adults will deal with a
mental health disorder during their lifetime, but that less than half will
receive any treatment. With a shortage of mental health professionals at the
national level, she explains, the entire behavioral health industry is in need
of a mechanism to connect behavioral health services with the people who need
them. As its answer to this problem, TelaCare has announced that it will expand
into “telepsychiatry” services to include seven states by fourth quarter of
2016 and all states by the end of the year.
Telemedicine services are not just connected to employers and insurers either,
they are working with non-traditional medical providers to expand their
services into areas with high need.
Mental
Health Services Are a Logical Step
Telemedicine and telemedicine
companies are expanding to offer mental health services because it makes sense.
It is not just that the services are needed, but that insurance providers and
government health programs (including Medicaid in 48 states) have come to
recognize how important mental health services are. Reimbursement for online
health care, including video consultations, has been increased to the point
where it is feasible to provide these services now.
Behavioral health is a good fit for telemedicine because there is little in the
way of a physical exam. Most of the treatments rely on talk therapy that is
supplemented by prescription medications. It is easy enough to send a
prescription over the Internet, which is uniquely suited to verbal
communication and the kind of one-on-one chats that mental health providers have
with patients every day in office settings.
The structure for reimbursement has finally caught up with the technology,
making it possible for telemedicine providers to offer mental health services
to millions who would not otherwise have access. With a limited number of
therapists to tap, such services make it easier for nearly 44 million American
adults to get the care they need in a convenient, affordable manner.
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