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Mental Health: More Californians are talking to their therapists through a video screen or by phone than in person, marking a profound shift in how mental health care is delivered as record-setting numbers seek help.
While patients and providers say teletherapy is effective and easier to get than in-person services, experts in the field noted that teletherapy often requires a skilled mental health practitioner trained to pick up subtle communication cues.
Almost half of the roughly 4.8 million adults who visited a medical professional for mental health or substance use disorders in 2023 did so exclusively through teletherapy, according to a KFF Health News analysis of the latest data from UCLA’s California Health Interview Survey.
About 24% of adults used a combination of face-to-face and teletherapy in 2023, while roughly 23% got help exclusively in person, according to the survey of about 20,000 California households.
A recent national study of patients in the Department of Veterans Affairs health care system found a similar pattern: Fifty-five percent of mental health care continued to be provided via telemedicine, a figure that spiked after patients shifted to teletherapy by necessity during the covid-19 pandemic.
Teletherapy is certainly more convenient, allowing patients to see their therapists from the comfort of home.
“It’s actually really effective,” said Joshua Heitzmann, president of the California Psychological Association. “I think part of that is that it just allows more comfortability — people are willing to work a little bit more when they’re comfortable.” KFFHealthNews/SP