Depression Screening Less Likely During Telehealth Than In-Person Visit
A recent study reveals that depression screenings during telehealth visits were less frequent compared to in-person visits early in the pandemic. Conducted by UCSF researchers, the study analyzed depression screening rates based on visit type and patient characteristics. It found significantly lower odds of screening during video and telephone visits compared to in-person appointments. The transition to telemedicine and the urgency of the pandemic response led to lagging workflows for depression screening in telemedicine encounters. The study emphasizes the need for fully integrating screening into telehealth visits, particularly addressing emerging disparities by race, ethnicity, language, or age. As depression rates rise, researchers explore strategies to enhance digital health technologies’ efficacy in mental health treatment.
Make faster decisions with community advice
- AI Gets Better At Writing Patient Histories When Physicians Engineer The Prompts
- New Study Evaluates Virtual Reality to Reduce Scanxiety in Brain Tumor Patients
- Revolutionizing Healthcare: Harnessing the Power of IoT Solutions for Improved Patient Outcomes
- Carrum Health Raises $45 Million Series B to Expand Cancer Care Offerings and Launch New Service Lines
- Ethical Guardrails Are Essential To Making Generative AI Work For Healthcare
Deploy this technology today
-
nQ Cortex
Matched with Medical Subject Headings (MeSH): Biomedical Technology, Healthcare IT News: Artificial Intelligence
- NLabviva Platform
- Labviva Platform
- AI Dermatologist Platform
- Armis Platform for Healthcare